Planning a phone-only journey through the Scottish highlands is easier than you might think. Here’s everything you need to prepare before boarding at Glasgow.
Quick answer: can you really do the West Highland Line with just a phone?
Yes. In 2026, you can plan, book, and complete the entire West Highland Line route using only your mobile phone—no printed tickets or paper maps required.
The essentials:
- Book tickets via the ScotRail app with barcode e-tickets
- Show your ticket on screen to conductors
- Download offline maps and timetables before departure
- Carry a power bank (10,000mAh minimum)
Signaal is strong in Glasgow, Fort William, Oban, and Mallaig, but expect blackouts across rural stretches. The trick is to prepare everything in advance. Services like the 08:21 Glasgow Queen Street to Mallaig run daily, making same-day round trips entirely manageable through app-based planning.
Understanding the West Highland Line in 2026
The route runs from Glasgow Queen Street through Crianlarich to Fort William, then onward to Mallaig. A split at Crianlarich connects to Oban. You’ll cross Rannoch Moor and the iconic Glenfinnan Viaduct—places where netwerk coverage disappears but scenery peaks.
| Segment | Duur |
|---|---|
| Glasgow to Oban | 3h 20min |
| Glasgow to Fort William | 3h 50min |
| Glasgow to Mallaig | 5h 30min |
ScotRail operates all services, supporting mTickets and digital timetables. April–October sees 4-6 daily trains; winter drops to 2-3, making mobile navigation even more useful.
Booking your West Highland Line journey on your phone
Open the ScotRail app to research fares, find specific trains, and store tickets digitally. Search for your route—say, a weekend Glasgow to Fort William trip—and compare prices across different days.
For scenic seats, select window positions on the left side ascending to Mallaig for viaduct views. Screenshot your booking confirmation and QR code; if the app fails mid-journey, you’ll still have access to your ticket details.
Using your phone on the day of travel
At Glasgow station, unlock your screen, max brightness, and have your barcode ready for barriers. Use real-time data to check platform announcements and monitor delays at Crianlarich.
Photo any information boards showing changes. Once you start crossing Rannoch Moor, schakel to airplane mode—you’ll save batterij while still using your camera and offline content.
Navigation and offline tools for the West Highland Line
Download map tiles covering Glasgow, Fort William, Mallaig, and Oban before departure. Pin key locations: station entrances, bus stances, and accommodation.
Your phone’s GPS works without data, helping you track your position as you approach Loch Lomond or Glenfinnan. Save walking routes from stations to hotels as offline directions, and store PDF timetables in your files app.
Staying connected: signal, networks and power management
Coverage drops between Crianlarich and Rannoch (1-1.5 hours without signal) and across remote sections to Mallaig. This is normal—EE, Vodafone, O2, and Three all struggle here.
Power tips:
- Start at 100% charge
- Bring a fully charged power bank
- Use airplane mode during signal voids
- Download podcasts and playlists for offline entertainment
UK visitors need Type G adaptors; consider multi-port cables if sharing power.
Using your phone for safety, weather and emergencies
Check Met Office forecasts for Fort William and Mallaig before travel. Save emergency numbers (999) and local taxi contacten. Enable location sharing with someone if you’re walking sections of the West Highland Way.
Download offline first-aid guidance from apps like Red Cross. Keep your battery nearly full if hiking near stations.
Enhancing the experience: photography, notes and trip planning on your phone
Capture video at Glenfinnan and photos across Ben Nevis views. Use note apps to log favourite viewpoints and create a dedicated album grouping tickets, maps, and accommodation details in one page.
Plan onward ferries from Oban or Mallaig using saved timetables—everything stays in one place.
Contingency plans if your phone fails
Memorise key details: your train time from Glasgow, accommodation in Fort William or Edinburgh connections. Keep a small note in your wallet with addresses. Conductors can help look up bookings with your name and ID.
Store backups in the cloud—if your device is verloren, you can still access reservations. With preparation completed, travelling the West Highland Line by phone alone becomes not just possible, but genuinely enjoyable.