Planning a scenic rail journey across the Yorkshire Dales no longer requires paper timetables, printed tickets, or guidebooks stuffed into your bag. In 2025 and 2026, you can explore the entire Settle Carlisle Railway from Leeds to Carlisle using nothing but your smartphone—from booking to boarding to capturing photos of the famous Ribblehead Viaduct.
Quick start: plan a Leeds–Carlisle trip from your sofa
A full day on the Settle Carlisle line can be planned, ticketed, and enjoyed entirely through your phone. Here’s the basic flow:
- Choose your date – Pick a clear summer Saturday or an autumn foliage day in October
- Buy digital tickets – Purchase e-tickets via a train operator app or National Rail website
- Download key apps – Journey planners, maps, and the free Traxplorer line guide
- Board at Leeds – Show your mobile ticket and find your seat
- Enjoy the stops – Hop off at Settle, explore Ribblehead, browse Appleby’s riverside streets
- Finish in Carlisle – Arrive ready to visit the castle or head to Scotland
Every tool suggested in this guide works on mobile. Printed tickets, paper maps, and physical timetables are entirely optional—your phone handles everything.
What makes the Settle–Carlisle line special?
The Carlisle line stretches 73 miles from Leeds through the Yorkshire Dales and Eden Valley, featuring 14 tunnels and 22 viaducts. It’s widely regarded as England’s most scenic mainline railway.
Saved from closure in 1989 after more than 100,000 people signed petitions, the route celebrates its 150th anniversary of passenger services in 2026. Northern recorded 995,000 journeys on the line in 2025—the highest since records began.
Landmarks you’ll want to photograph:
- Ribblehead Viaduct – 28 arches rising 104 feet above the valley
- Dent station – England’s highest mainline station at 1,150 feet
- Garsdale – Remote moorland halt with Three Peaks views
- Eden Valley – Sweeping pastoral scenery approaching Carlisle
- Appleby – Historic market town with riverside attractions
The classic scenic stretch runs Settle–Ribblehead–Dent–Garsdale–Kirkby Stephen–Appleby–Carlisle. The rest of this guide focuses on making that section easy via mobile.
Choosing your travel date and route with your phone
Northern operates train services year-round between Leeds and Carlisle. Expect around 8 trains each direction Monday to Saturday, with slightly fewer on Sundays. The only closure dates are Christmas Day and Boxing Day.
Using a journey planner app or mobile site:
- Set your origin (Leeds, Skipton, or Settle) and destination (Appleby or Carlisle)
- Filter for “via Settle” if travelling from distant points like London
- Check for engineering works and replacement buses on your chosen date
- Confirm train times before leaving home
Best times to travel:
| Sezonas | Advantage |
|---|---|
| Late May – early September | Extended daylight, warm enough to explore stops |
| October | Autumn colours across the Dales |
| Mid-morning departures | Golden light over Ribblehead around 11am–2pm northbound |
| Late trains (summer) | Sunset views west toward the Pennines |
Example journeys:
- A July Leeds–Carlisle round trip in a single day via 2–3 hour services each way
- A one-way Skipton–Carlisle run in October 2025 for autumn colours
Note that the 150th anniversary in 2026 and special steam trips (including a chartered excursion on May 25, 2026) can make some dates busier. Check availability early on your phone to avoid disappointment.
Buying and storing tickets entirely on your phone
You can travel the whole route with e-tickets or mobile barcodes. No ticket office visit or printer required.
Main ticket types for phone users:
| Ticket Type | Geriausia | Pastabos |
|---|---|---|
| Advance singles | Cheapest fixed-train fares (often £12–20 Leeds–Carlisle) | Book via app, non-refundable |
| Off-Peak/Anytime | Flexibility to break journey at Ribblehead, Appleby | Higher cost, hop on/off same day |
| Settle & Carlisle Day Ranger | Unlimited travel Settle–Carlisle after 08:45 weekdays | May require purchase from conductor on some services |
Step-by-step mobile booking:
- Open a UK train operator app or National Rail Enquiries on your phone
- Search fares for your route and date
- Select “e-ticket” or “mobile ticket” instead of “collect at station”
- Pay using card, "Apple" Pay, or Google Pay
- Add the ticket to your phone wallet or save the PDF/QR in an accessible folder
Before you travel:
- Charge your phone fully and pack a power bank
- Download tickets or take screenshots—signal drops between Settle and Ribblehead
- Standard class e-tickets work across all Northern services on this route
For the 150th anniversary steam charters, expect PDF e-tickets emailed a few days before departure. Simply display them on your phone during boarding.
Apps to download before you go
Your phone becomes your timetable, guidebook, and audio tour in one device. Install these before leaving home:
- Journey planner app – Check real-time departures for all stations Leeds to Carlisle; log in to view saved tickets
- Live disruption app – Monitor delays, platform changes, and cancellations on travel day
- Map and navigation app – Google Maps or offline alternatives for walks from stations to viewpoints
- Orų programa – Decide whether to hop off at Ribblehead or wait for better conditions
- Note-taking app – Record the best photo spots and stats from your journey
- Traxplorer – Free app launched for the 150th anniversary with interactive points of interest, station histories, and audio narratives
Offline capability is essential. Cache maps and bookmark the Leeds–Settle–Appleby–Carlisle timetable page before departure. Save the Ribblehead Viaduct location for offline use—you’ll thank yourself when signal disappears.
Using your phone on the train: navigation, views and photos
Many Northern services lack Wi-Fi and power sockets, but your phone remains an invaluable on-board guide.
Navigation and tracking:
- Use GPS and a live map to track progress through tunnels and moorland
- Bookmarked line guides let you read about each landmark as you pass Blea Moor Tunnel (2.5 miles), Dent, Garsdale, and Kirkby Stephen
Where to sit for the best views:
| Direction | Best Side | Key Views |
|---|---|---|
| Northbound (Leeds to Carlisle) | Left (east) | Ribblehead approach, Pennine vistas |
| Southbound (Carlisle to Leeds) | Right (west) | Eden Valley panoramas |
Photography tips:
- Clean the window with a tissue before setting up shots
- Use burst mode when crossing Ribblehead—the viaduct is hard to capture in a single shot at 40–60mph
- Turn off flash and use wide-angle settings
- Don’t miss the Three Peaks views after Dent
Akumuliatorius and connectivity management:
- Enable battery-saver mode and dim your screen between photo sessions
- Download podcasts or playlists at home to avoid streaming in low-signal areas
- Keep tickets and maps available offline
Exploring key stops with just your phone
Many travellers hop on and off between Leeds and Carlisle, using their phones to check train times, find walks, and locate maistas.
Įsikurti Use maps on your phone to walk from the station into the market town (about 500 metres). Cafes and pubs like The Naked Man or Ye Olde Naked Man Cafe sit within a short walk of the heritage station. Grab a coffee or tea before reboarding.
Ribblehead Follow the signed path (5–10 minutes) from the station to the foot of the viaduct. The seasonal visitor centre and Station Inn pub are nearby. Mobile signal is limited—pre-download maps before arrival. This walk rewards with the line’s most iconic photo opportunity.
Dent England’s highest mainline station at 1,150 feet offers upland solitude. Navigation apps help if you plan a 2-mile descent walk toward Dentdale village. The station itself feels wonderfully remote.
Garsdale This moorland station once connected to the Hawes branch (closed 1959). Services are infrequent here—confirm your return train times on your phone carefully to avoid a long wait.
Appleby A 10–15 minute stroll from the station leads to the town centre and river. Use your phone to discover shops, cafes, and medieval architecture worth photographing. The riverside walk is particularly pleasant in summer.
Real-time train apps help you make confident decisions about how long to stay at each stop. Check service frequency before alighting—some stations see just one or two trains per hour.
Accessibility, safety and etiquette when relying on your phone
Many visitors use phones as their primary travel tool, including older travellers and those hoping for a hassle-free trip.
- Use screen zoom, high-contrast modes, and large-text settings for reading tickets and timetables
- Check station access information in advance—some older carriages have limited step-free access
- Ribblehead and Dent stations lack full ramp facilities
Safety:
- Don’t stand in doorways or lean out to get photos over viaducts
- Keep your phone and valuables secure when doors open at small stations
- Download emergency contact details and offline maps for walks from remote stations
Etiquette:
- Use headphones for music and videos
- Keep phone calls brief and quiet—standard class carriages aren’t phone-free
- Avoid blocking views with extended selfie sessions in busy 2–3 automobilis traukiniai
- Don’t hog any available charging sockets; they’re rare
Sample one-day Settle–Carlisle itinerary you can follow on your phone
Here’s a concrete, phone-led example for a summer Saturday:
| Laikas | Veikla | Phone Use |
|---|---|---|
| 10:30am | Board Leeds–Carlisle train | Show e-ticket, find seat |
| 11:20am | Alight at Settle | Map app to find cafe near station |
| 11:50am | Coffee and browse market town | Review apps for local spots |
| 12:30pm | Reboard northbound service | Track via GPS |
| 12:45pm | Cross Ribblehead Viaduct | Burst-mode photos through window |
| 13:00pm | Optional: hop off at Ribblehead | Short walk to viaduct base, collect photos |
| 14:00pm | Continue to Appleby | Journey planner app |
| 14:30pm | Explore Appleby town and river | Map app guides you from platform |
| 15:30pm | Onward to Carlisle | Confirm platform and head to train |
| 16:00pm | Arrive Carlisle | Map to castle, cathedral, or drink at a nearby pub |
Every decision—train choice, food stops, walks—is supported by apps rather than paper. Adapt times by checking updated timetables on your phone closer to travel.
Frequently asked questions about phone-only travel on the Settle–Carlisle
Can I do the trip if my phone battery dies mid-journey? Bring a power bank. A dead phone with an unscannable ticket can create problems—carry ID as backup and consider keeping a screenshot on a second device if travelling with a member of your group.
Is mobile priėmimas available along the whole route? No. Signal drops between Settle and Appleby, particularly around Ribblehead and through tunnels. Download everything important before departure.
Do I need printed tickets as backup? Not strictly, but some travellers prefer a printout for peace of mind. You can print tickets at home or collect from a station machine if it makes you more comfortable.
Are there plug sockets or Wi-Fi on the trains? Most Northern services have neither. Plan as though there are none—charge fully and download offline content.
Can I store tickets for multiple people on one phone? Yes, in most apps. Keep your group together during ticket checks so everyone’s ticket is accessible.
What if an app fails or a QR code won’t scan? Keep confirmation emails and booking reference numbers accessible on your phone. Staff can look up reservations manually if needed.
Final tips and next steps
A journey on the Settle Carlisle railway in 2025 or 2026 can be almost entirely managed via your smartphone—from booking fares to tracking your progress across the Dales.
Key reminders:
- Plan at least a week ahead during peak summer or around 150th anniversary events for better fares and seat choices
- Download everything important (tickets, maps, timetables) before leaving home
- Prioritise battery life: power bank, offline content, minimal screen brightness
- Leave room for spontaneity—use your phone to spot an interesting stop and decide to explore
Pick a clear day, charge your phone, and experience why nearly a million passengers travel this route each year. The Yorkshire Dales are waiting.

