Wembley Stadium hosts the biggest events — cup finals, England games, huge concerts — and for Kent-based fans, getting home afterwards means a long journey from north-west London all the way across to the south-east. With 90,000 leaving at once and last trains to beat, it's a real challenge. This guide covers the journey home from Wembley to Kent, and why a pre-booked transfer beats the scramble.
Wembley Stadium sits in north-west London (HA9); Kent is south-east of the city — so the journey home is one of the longest cross-London treks there is. Add a 90,000-capacity crowd emptying at once, packed Wembley stations, a cross-city journey, and Kent-bound trains that may be among the last of the night, and it's a genuine ordeal by public transport. A direct transfer removes all of it.
A full Wembley empties one of the biggest crowds in the country into the stations together.
North-west London to Kent is about as far across the city as it gets.
Evening events risk leaving you racing for the last train into Kent — miss it and you're stuck.
Each connection is a delay risk on an already long journey.
| From | Saloon | Executive | MPV | 8-Seater |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bromley | £108 | £123 | £126 | £135 |
| Dartford | £123 | £142 | £146 | £158 |
| Maidstone | £135 | £157 | £161 | £158 |
| Sevenoaks | £141 | £165 | £169 | £166 |
| From | Saloon | Executive | MPV | 8-Seater |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bromley | £194 | £221 | £227 | £243 |
| Dartford | £221 | £256 | £263 | £284 |
| Maidstone | £243 | £283 | £290 | £284 |
| Sevenoaks | £254 | £297 | £304 | £299 |
Fares vary by your Kent postcode. A direct run home avoids the longest cross-London trek and last-train risk. Saloon seats 4, MPV 6, 8-seaters for groups of fans.
For a Kent-based supporter, the journey home from Wembley Stadium represents perhaps the most demanding post-event trek that London can offer, requiring a traverse of virtually the entire diagonal of the capital from the north-west, where the stadium stands, all the way to the south-east and out into Kent beyond. This is a formidable undertaking at the best of times, but Wembley events are rarely modest affairs, being reserved for cup finals, England internationals and the very biggest concert tours, so the journey typically begins with a crowd approaching ninety thousand all attempting to leave at once through the Wembley stations, an experience of sustained crowding before the long cross-city journey has even started. From there, reaching a Kent-bound service means changes and connections across the whole width of London, each a potential point of delay, and after an evening event the ever-present anxiety of the last train adds a competitive edge to an already tiring trip, with the genuine prospect of being stranded in the capital should a connection be missed. It is precisely this worst-case scenario that a direct transfer is designed to eliminate, offering instead a single comfortable journey from an agreed pickup point near the stadium straight to the door in Kent, a solution whose value in removing stress and uncertainty is considerable, and which becomes genuinely economical when a group of supporters shares an eight-seater for the trip home together.
A: Wembley is north-west London and Kent is south-east — one of the longest cross-London journeys, with 90,000 leaving at once and a last-train race after evening events.
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 — any Wembley event, from cup finals and England games to major concerts.
Getting home to Kent from Wembley is one of the longest post-event journeys there is, with 90,000 leaving at once and a last-train race to beat. 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 longest trek and last-train race.
Book Now →