A black, coal-fired locomotive billowing white smoke as it curves across a 21-arch concrete viaduct above a Highland loch — yes, the Hogwarts Express is real, and yes, you can ride it. The Jacobite runs 84 miles round-trip between Fort William and Mallaig on the Mallaig Extension of the West Highland Line, trading a day's worth of Scotland's most dramatic geography for the price of a steam-train day return — and one moment of pure cinematic magic on the Glenfinnan Viaduct.
Voted the world's greatest rail journey by Wanderlust readers in 2009 — ahead of the Trans-Siberian and the line to Machu Picchu — the route starts at the foot of Ben Nevis, skirts Britain's deepest freshwater loch, passes its most westerly mainland station, and ends beside a working fishing harbour with a ferry to Skye waiting at the pier. Whether you're a Harry Potter fan, a railway enthusiast, or simply chasing the best of the Highlands, this is a highlight of any trip to Scotland.
2026 season status — last checked 3 June 2026
After a regulator-driven safety dispute, the Jacobite resumed services on 1 June 2026, roughly two months late, on a reduced morning-only timetable and is expected to run to late October. As of early June, West Coast Railways' own online booking is still closed and the first departures were reserved for pre-booked tour-operator passengers. Booking through a tour operator that pre-purchases seats (below) is currently the most reliable way to secure the ride. Always reconfirm dates and prices on the operator's page before you book.
From Edinburgh: Hogwarts Express & Scottish Highlands Tour
The most popular way to ride the Jacobite without a car or the closed direct-booking system. This full-day small-group tour from Edinburgh runs you through Glencoe and the Highlands and includes a seat on the steam train across the Glenfinnan Viaduct — no need to chase WCR's sold-out platform tickets yourself.
Highland Explorer Tours | From $267 per person | Steam-train ride included | 4.5/5 from 688 reviews
What It Is — and Why It's So Famous
The Jacobite is a heritage steam excursion operated by West Coast Railways, run under that name since 1995 (steam has worked the route every summer since 1984). The name nods to the 18th-century Jacobite rising of 1745, which began at Glenfinnan when Bonnie Prince Charlie raised his standard at the head of Loch Shiel.
The line itself is a feat of Victorian engineering. The Mallaig Extension opened in 1901, largely built by Robert "Concrete Bob" McAlpine, a pioneer of mass concrete. Over 41 miles each way it stacks superlatives end to end: it starts at the foot of Ben Nevis (Britain's highest mountain), passes Britain's most westerly mainland station at Arisaig, skirts Loch Morar (Britain's deepest freshwater loch) and the River Morar (its shortest river), and terminates beside Loch Nevis (Europe's deepest sea-water loch) — through eleven tunnels and across eight major bridges.
The Glenfinnan Viaduct
The crossing is the moment everyone remembers. Built 1897–1901 in un-reinforced mass concrete, the viaduct has 21 arches, runs 380 m (416 yards) long and stands 100 ft high at the centre — Scotland's longest concrete railway bridge. It's curved in plan, which is exactly why it photographs so spectacularly from the hillside above.
The train slows as it sweeps around the curve — 30 to 45 seconds across the arches with steam billowing past the windows. It's the most-photographed and most-described moment of the whole journey, and the reason hundreds of people gather on the viewpoint hillside below with cameras raised, whether they're riding or not.
The Real Hogwarts Express
The viaduct featured in the Hogwarts Express sequences across five Harry Potter films — most famously the Chamber of Secrets scene where Harry and Ron's flying Ford Anglia almost clips the train. West Coast Railways provided the steam engine and several carriages for filming, and the surrounding scenery doubled for Hogwarts: Loch Shiel played the "Black Lake," and a small island in Loch Eilt was Dumbledore's grave.
A couple of gentle myth-corrections: the close-up film locomotive was "Olton Hall" (GWR 5972), now displayed at the Warner Bros. Studio Tour London — not the engine you'll ride. "The Jacobite" isn't a single named loco either; WCR rotates several engines (Stanier Black 5s 44871 and 45407 are the 2026 motive power). And the film interiors were shot on a sound stage — the closest real-world match is the six-person First Class Compartment carriage.
Tickets, Times & How to Book
The route & timing. Fort William to Mallaig is about 2 hr 10 min each way; the full round trip runs roughly 6 hours including a ~1 hr 44 min layover in Mallaig. The morning service departs Fort William around 10:15, reaches Mallaig about 12:25, and returns to arrive back near 16:00. The only scheduled intermediate stop is Glenfinnan Station (~15 min).
2026 fares (West Coast Railways, adult day-return).
- Standard Class: £76 adult / £43 child
- First Class: £116 adult / £76 child (complimentary tea/coffee both legs)
- First Class Compartment ("HP" carriage): per-compartment pricing, seats up to 6, morning service only — books fastest
- Tickets are return-only, not included in any rail pass (Eurail, Interrail, BritRail). A buffet car operates, and you may bring your own food and drink, including alcohol.
Which side for the viaduct view? Sit on the left going to Mallaig and the right coming back. You can't pre-select your side — WCR's system automatically swaps passengers between legs so everyone gets a viaduct view in one direction. The opening door-vestibule windows are where experienced travellers go to photograph the crossing.
How to book. The only official direct channel is West Coast Railways' booking page or phone line — there are no authorised resellers, and in normal years peak July–August dates sell out months ahead. For 2026, with direct online booking still closed, third-party tour operators that pre-purchase seats (featured above and below) are often the only available way to ride. WCR also historically holds a few walk-up cash seats sold on the Fort William platform on the morning of departure.
Photograph It From the Glenfinnan Viewpoint
Don't want to ride? Many travel writers argue the viewpoint is the better photographic experience. Park at the National Trust for Scotland visitor centre (£3 per car), follow the "Viaduct Trail & Viewpoints" signs up a steep, often-muddy ~15-minute climb, and arrive about 30 minutes before the crossing — westbound typically ~10:45–11:00, eastbound ~15:00–15:20. Wear proper shoes, arrive early in peak season (both car parks fill), and verify the times the morning of, because Jacobite punctuality is variable. If the steam train isn't running, ScotRail diesels still cross the viaduct several times a day.
Jacobite vs ScotRail vs a Guided Tour
Three ways to cross the Glenfinnan Viaduct, at very different price points. The Jacobite is the steam-and-vintage experience; ScotRail runs the same tracks for a fraction of the price; a guided tour solves the no-car, sold-out-tickets problem.
| Jacobite Steam Train | ScotRail (West Highland Line) | Guided Tour Package | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Experience | Steam-hauled vintage carriages, tourist experience | Modern Class 156 diesel commuter unit | Coach + a one-way Jacobite leg, with a guide |
| Price | From £76 Standard day-return | ~£25.40 anytime day-return (advance singles from £9.20) | From ~$79–$267+ for a day tour |
| Journey time | ~2 hr 10 min each way (~6 hr round trip) | ~90 min each way | 12–16 hr door-to-door from the cities |
| Frequency (2026) | One daily morning return | ~4 daily (1 on Sundays) | Daily, seasonal |
| Crosses the viaduct? | Yes — slows for photos | Yes — no steam | Yes, on the train leg |
| How to book | WCR direct (closed for 2026) or via a tour operator | ScotRail — flexible, no advance booking needed | GetYourGuide / Viator |
| Best for | The steam experience & Harry Potter fans | Budget & flexibility (hop on/off) | No-car travellers based in Edinburgh/Glasgow/Inverness |
Is It Worth It?
Reviewer consensus is overwhelmingly yes, with two honest caveats: ticket prices have risen sharply (£76+ for Standard), and the 2023–26 period has seen real service disruption and patchier carriage quality. If you want the steam-and-vintage-carriage experience and don't mind the cost and the months-ahead planning, ride it. If you want the iconic shot, are on a budget, or have flexibility, photograph it from the viewpoint. Do both if you can.
A practical note for day-trippers: doing the Jacobite from Edinburgh or Glasgow as a single self-driven day is brutal (12–16 hours door-to-door). The easiest options are a guided tour with a coach leg one way and the train the other, or an overnight in Fort William before the morning service.