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Are there toilets in London Underground?

Where are the tube toilets? Your best bet for finding a place to pee is on the outer edges of the lines. In central London, you're not likely to have much luck. In terms of lines, the District, Central, and Elizabeth lines are most likely to have facilities along the way.



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TfL toilet facilities are free to access, but some non-TfL facilities may be chargeable. Other public toilets may be available near to stations. Some facilities are inside the station's ticket gates.

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Yes. There are toilets at the end of each coach, as well as disabled toilets and baby changing facilities on board. If you'd like to make sure you're sitting nearby, go to Manage a booking to choose your seat.

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Most trains don't have sewage tanks so anything in the toilet is dumped straight onto the tracks.

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How difficult is this retrofitting job, and why is it taking so long? Sewage from train toilets continues to be emptied onto certain railway lines in the UK. Sewage from train toilets continues to be emptied onto certain railway lines in the UK, despite vows by authorities to stop this practice.

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Why are there no toilets on Elizabeth Line trains to Reading? The most controversial aspect of the new trains is that there are no toilets. A spokesman for TfL explained why. He said: Toilets are not provided on the TfL Rail/Elizabeth Line trains.

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All London's bus routes have access to a toilet. There are currently 176 routes (25 per cent of all routes) with a toilet at only one end.

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Some train drivers are changing sanitary towels in bushes by the side of the track – that's outrageous in a first world country in 2021. Others urinate or defecate into carrier bags and bottles.

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