For Kent-based Spurs fans, getting home from the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium after a match means a long journey from North London across to the south-east — through the post-match crowds, across the city, and onto Kent-bound trains that may be among the last of the night. This guide covers the journey home from Tottenham to Kent, and why a pre-booked transfer beats the scramble.
The Tottenham Hotspur Stadium sits in North London (N17); Kent is south-east of the city. So the journey home is a long cross-London one — from the packed crowds around White Hart Lane and Seven Sisters, across the city, to a Kent-bound mainline station, then a train into the county. After an evening match, that can mean chasing a last train, with the risk of being stranded. A direct transfer removes it all.
A 62,000-capacity stadium empties into North London's stations all at once.
North London to a Kent-bound station is one of the longer cross-city journeys.
Evening kickoffs risk leaving you racing for the last train into Kent.
Multiple changes, each a chance to be delayed and miss the next leg.
| From | Saloon | Executive | MPV | 8-Seater |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bromley | £103 | £117 | £119 | £127 |
| Dartford | £108 | £123 | £126 | £135 |
| Sevenoaks | £133 | £155 | £159 | £173 |
| Maidstone | £130 | £151 | £154 | £167 |
| From | Saloon | Executive | MPV | 8-Seater |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bromley | £185 | £211 | £214 | £229 |
| Dartford | £194 | £221 | £227 | £243 |
| Sevenoaks | £239 | £279 | £286 | £311 |
| Maidstone | £234 | £272 | £277 | £301 |
Fares vary by your Kent postcode. A direct run home avoids the long cross-London trek and last-train risk. Saloon seats 4, MPV 6, 8-seaters for groups of fans.
Of all the London grounds from which a Kent-based supporter might need to travel home, the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium presents one of the more demanding journeys, thanks to its position in the far north of the capital at Tottenham, about as distant as it is possible to be from the south-eastern approaches to Kent. The stadium itself is a magnificent modern arena holding over sixty thousand, and that very capacity means an immense crowd spilling out into the streets of N17 and towards Seven Sisters, White Hart Lane and the surrounding stations after every home game, creating congestion that must be navigated before the long cross-London journey even begins. For a supporter heading to Kent, this means crossing virtually the entire breadth of London to reach a Kent-bound line, a trek involving multiple changes each carrying its own risk of delay, and after an evening fixture the added jeopardy of a dwindling last-train timetable that can turn the trip into an anxious dash. A direct transfer removes this entire burden by collecting supporters from an agreed point near the ground and driving them straight home to Kent in one journey, an approach whose comfort and reliability are especially valued by groups, who can travel together in a single vehicle and share a cost that compares favourably with the combined price and hassle of the rail alternative.
A: It's in North London and Kent is south-east, so it's a long cross-London journey, often racing for a last train after evening games.
A: Yes — an 8-seater keeps the group together, splits the cost, and goes straight to Kent.
A: Yes — a pre-booked transfer waits for you; no racing for the last train.
A: Yes — agreed upfront by your Kent postcode, no post-match surge.
Getting home to Kent from the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium means a long cross-London journey, often chasing a last train after an evening match. A direct fixed-price transfer takes you straight home from an agreed pickup point — no trek, no last-train panic, especially good for a group of Kent fans.
Straight to Kent — skip the long trek and last-train race.
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