You can absolutely visit the Cotswolds without a car. It takes a little more planning than driving, because the villages are small and the buses are rural, but the trains are frequent, a handful of bus routes link the best-known towns and villages, and some of the loveliest parts, the short walks between villages, are better on foot anyway.
This guide covers exactly how to do it: how to arrive, how to get around once you are here on public transport, which towns make the best car-free bases, and a free tool that builds you a realistic day-by-day plan around your own dates and interests.
Build your own car-free plan
Answer four quick questions and the planner below builds a car-free itinerary for you, grounded in which buses actually run and how far the walks really are. Read on underneath for the detail behind it.
The quick version
- Arrive by train on the Cotswold Line, direct from London Paddington to Moreton-in-Marsh in about 1 hour 40 minutes.
- Base yourself in Moreton-in-Marsh: it is the only Cotswold town with its own mainline station, and the hub of the main bus route.
- Hop between the towns and villages on the Pulhams 801 bus (Cheltenham, Bourton, Stow, Moreton).
- Use The Robin, a bookable on-demand bus, to reach the villages the timetabled buses miss.
- Walk the short signed paths between villages, such as Bourton to the Slaughters.
- Do less than you think. Two villages enjoyed properly beats five glimpsed from a bus window.
Getting to the Cotswolds by train
Most car-free trips start on the Cotswold Line, the Great Western Railway route from London Paddington and Oxford up to Worcester and Hereford. The stops that matter for visitors are:
- Moreton-in-Marsh, the only station actually inside a Cotswold town, and your best all-round base.
- Kingham, a rural station for Stow-on-the-Wold and Chipping Norton (a short taxi or Robin ride away).
- Charlbury, a lovely village with the station right in it.
- Honeybourne, the nearest railhead for Broadway.
In the southern Cotswolds, the Golden Valley line runs from Swindon through Kemble (for Cirencester and Tetbury) and Stroud on to Gloucester and Cheltenham. For the full arrival picture from every direction, see our guide to getting to the Cotswolds.
Getting around the Cotswolds without a car
Once you are here, the Cotswolds public transport network comes down to three things: scheduled buses, a bookable on-demand bus, and your own two feet.
Scheduled buses
The workhorse is the Pulhams 801, which links Cheltenham, Bourton-on-the-Water, Stow-on-the-Wold, Moreton-in-Marsh and Chipping Norton, roughly hourly Monday to Saturday with a sparser Sunday service. In the south, the Stagecoach 66 runs from Stroud and Cheltenham to Painswick (for the Rococo Garden), and the 882 connects Cirencester and Kemble with Tetbury.
The Robin, your bookable bus
The Robin is a demand-responsive bus run for Gloucestershire County Council. Instead of a fixed route, you book a journey within a zone and it picks you up. It covers a North Cotswolds zone (Chipping Campden, Moreton, Stow, Bourton, Snowshill, Lower Slaughter) and a South Cotswolds zone (Cirencester, Lechlade, Kemble, Tetbury), runs 7am to 7pm Monday to Saturday, and costs around £2 a trip. Book by app or by phone, ideally the day before. It is the single best tool for reaching villages the 801 does not.
Walking
Some of the best links between villages are short, flat and signed. Bourton-on-the-Water to Lower Slaughter is about 1.3 miles, and Lower to Upper Slaughter another 0.7 miles, both along the stream-side Wardens’ Way. For many visitors the walking is not the compromise, it is the highlight.
Taxis
Pre-book by phone, especially for evenings and from rural stations. There is no Uber out here, so do not rely on hailing one on the day.
One ticket for trains and buses: the Cotswolds Discoverer
The Cotswolds Discoverer is an off-peak day pass giving unlimited travel on participating train routes (Great Western Railway, CrossCountry and Transport for Wales) and Stagecoach buses across the area. It costs around £15 for adults (check the current price), and you buy it at staffed station ticket offices or on board Stagecoach buses, not online. It is off-peak only, so on weekdays you cannot start travelling until after roughly 8.50am.
One thing to know: it covers Stagecoach buses, so the Pulhams 801 is a separate pay-as-you-go fare. The Discoverer pays off best on a day with several train and Stagecoach hops.
At a glance: the key car-free routes
| Route | Type | Connects | Roughly how often |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cotswold Line (GWR) | Train | London Paddington / Oxford to Charlbury, Kingham, Moreton-in-Marsh, Honeybourne | Hourly; London to Moreton ~1h40 |
| Golden Valley line (GWR) | Train | Swindon to Kemble, Stroud, Gloucester, Cheltenham | Hourly |
| Pulhams 801 | Bus | Cheltenham, Bourton, Stow, Moreton, Chipping Norton | ~Hourly Mon-Sat, limited Sun |
| The Robin | Bookable bus | North & South Cotswolds zones, door to door | On demand, 7am-7pm Mon-Sat |
| Stagecoach 66 | Bus | Cheltenham, Painswick, Stroud | ~Hourly Mon-Sat |
| Stagecoach 882 | Bus | Cirencester, Kemble, Tetbury | Several daily |
| Stagecoach S3 | Bus | Oxford, Woodstock (Blenheim), Charlbury, Chipping Norton | Up to 4 an hour to Woodstock |
Rural timetables change and some routes thin out on Sundays. Always check live times the night before you travel.
The best car-free bases, compared
| Base | Own station? | Why it works without a car |
|---|---|---|
| Moreton-in-Marsh | Yes, mainline | The winner. In-town station, hub of the 801, and a big Tuesday market. If in doubt, base here. |
| Bourton-on-the-Water | No | Central for the 801 and walkable to the Slaughters. Arrive by bus or taxi from Moreton or Kingham. |
| Stow-on-the-Wold | No | On the 801 and walkable to the Slaughters. Arrive by bus or taxi. |
| Broadway | No | Flat and easy on foot, the most comfortable base in winter or with limited mobility. Honeybourne station is a short taxi away. |
| Stroud / Cirencester | Stroud: yes | The southern Cotswolds. Stroud is on the railway; Cirencester is reached by bus from Kemble or Stroud. |
| Oxford or Bath | Yes | Day-trip-in bases that are destinations in their own right. Use the S3 bus from Oxford, or a guided day tour from Bath. |
A sample 2-day car-free itinerary
Based in Moreton-in-Marsh, this is the kind of relaxed plan the tool above will tailor to your own dates.
Day 1. Arrive into Moreton by train and settle in. Wander the wide market street (Tuesday is market day, the best time to see the town busy). In the afternoon, take the 801 to Stow-on-the-Wold for the square and the famous yew-tree church door, then walk down to the Slaughters and back. Dinner at a pub in Moreton.
Day 2. Take the 801 to Bourton-on-the-Water mid-morning, then walk the flat, signed path from Bourton to Lower Slaughter and on to Upper Slaughter, about two miles in total. Tea at the old mill. Bourton is at its best early or late, so let the day-trippers leave and enjoy the river in the early evening before heading back.
The one rule: do less
The most common mistake car-free visitors make is cramming. Without a car the buses set the tempo, so two places enjoyed properly beats five rushed. There is an upside to this beyond your own sanity: these villages are already busy and well known, and arriving by train and bus, spreading out, and visiting early or late is simply the nicer way to see them. It is less about whether to come and more about coming well.
Cotswolds without a car: FAQ
Can you visit the Cotswolds without a car?
Yes. Trains reach several Cotswold towns directly, a network of buses links the main villages, and the short walks between villages are part of the appeal. It takes more planning than driving, but it is very doable.
How do you get around the Cotswolds by public transport?
Trains on the Cotswold Line, the Pulhams 801 bus between the main towns and villages, the bookable Robin bus for the gaps, short walks between nearby villages, and pre-booked taxis for the awkward last miles.
What is the best Cotswolds base without a car?
Moreton-in-Marsh. It is the only Cotswold town with its own mainline station and sits at the hub of the 801 bus, so you can arrive and get around without ever needing a car.
Can you get to the Cotswolds by train from London?
Yes. Direct Great Western Railway trains run from London Paddington to Moreton-in-Marsh in about 1 hour 40 minutes.
Is there a bus between the Cotswold villages?
Yes. The Pulhams 801 links Cheltenham, Bourton, Stow and Moreton, and the bookable Robin bus covers the villages in between that the 801 does not reach.
How do you get from Moreton-in-Marsh to Bourton-on-the-Water without a car?
Take the Pulhams 801 bus, or book The Robin. Both connect the two towns without needing a car.
Is one day enough in the Cotswolds without a car?
In a day you can comfortably see one or two villages. Two or three days lets you slow down, walk between villages, and actually relax, which suits car-free travel far better.