Derailment at Denbigh Hall South Junction, 26 June 2025
Summary
RAIB published investigation report 04/2026 into a derailment at Denbigh Hall South Junction on 26 June 2025. An out-of-service passenger train travelling at 15 mph derailed on switch diamond points while making a wrong-direction movement. The derailment caused damage to train and railway infrastructure; no injuries occurred. RAIB identified that signalling staff had variable knowledge of switch diamond points and that the Rule Book did not cover the specific scenario of wrong-direction movements.
What changed
RAIB published its investigation findings into a derailment at Denbigh Hall South Junction on 26 June 2025, where an out-of-service passenger train travelling at 15 mph derailed on switch diamond points during a wrong-direction movement. The investigation found that signalling staff proposed and implemented an invalid path without recognising the error, and that no one in the train's leading cab noticed the unsafe point position. Root causes included variable staff knowledge of switch diamond points and gaps in Rule Book coverage for wrong-direction movements.
Affected parties including Network Rail, West Midlands Trains, and signallers should expect increased training requirements on path-setting verification and switch diamond point recognition. The Rail Safety and Standards Board may need to initiate Rule Book amendments to address scenarios involving signals at danger near wrong-direction movement start points. No enforcement actions or penalties were imposed; the investigation serves as a learning exercise for the rail industry.
What to do next
- Network Rail to provide signaller training on tools and techniques for setting up and checking train paths during out-of-course events
- Network Rail and West Midlands Trains to develop training for staff on switch diamond points
- Rail Safety and Standards Board to consider whether Rule Book needs updating for scenarios where a signal at danger is located at or near the start of a wrong-direction movement
Archived snapshot
Apr 16, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Report 04/2026: Derailment at Denbigh Hall South Junction
Derailment at Denbigh Hall South Junction, near Bletchley, Buckinghamshire, 26 June 2025.
From: Rail Accident Investigation Branch Published 13 April 2026 Railway type: Heavy rail Report type: Investigation report Date of occurrence: 26 June 2025 R042026260413Denbigh Hall South Junction
Summary
At about 12:27 on 26 June 2025, an out-of-service passenger train travelling at 15 mph (24 km/h) derailed as it passed over Denbigh Hall South Junction, on the West Coast Main Line, between Bletchley and Milton Keynes Central stations. At the time of the derailment, soon after the start of its journey from Bletchley station to a depot at Northampton, the train was making a wrong-direction movement over the junction. There were no injuries to any of the four members of train crew on the train but damage was caused to the train and to railway infrastructure.
The train derailed on switch diamond points which were in an unsafe position for the direction that the train was travelling over them. It had been necessary for the train to make a wrong-direction movement due to a fault which had prevented the driver from moving the train from the cab at one end. Once the need for the wrong-direction movement was identified and agreed, signalling staff at Rugby Signalling Control Centre proposed and then implemented a path for the train which they did not realise was invalid. Subsequent checking activities by these signalling staff did not identify this. When the train then arrived at the junction, no one in the train’s leading cab noticed that the switch diamond points were in an unsafe position for the train to pass over them.
A probable underlying factor to the accident was the staff involved had variable knowledge and understanding of what switch diamond points were and how trains operated over them. A possible underlying factor was that the training for signallers, when applying the Rule Book modules for authorising a train to pass a signal at danger (red) and for wrong-direction movements, did not sufficiently account for the information, strategies and knowledge used by experienced signallers.
As part of its investigation, RAIB also observed that the Rule Book did not cover the specific circumstances of this wrong-direction movement. This meant that the signaller was unintentionally not following the rules when they had authorised the driver to pass a signal at danger at the start of the movement.
Recommendations
RAIB has made four recommendations as a result of this investigation. The first is addressed to Network Rail to provide training to signallers on the tools and techniques that can be used when setting up and checking the proposed path for a train to take during an out‑of‑course event. The second and third, addressed to Network Rail and West Midlands Trains respectively, are to develop training for staff to give them the appropriate level of knowledge and understanding of switch diamond points to allow them to undertake their duties in accordance with the Rule Book. The fourth is addressed to the Rail Safety and Standards Board, in consultation with the rail industry, to consider whether the Rule Book needs to account for the scenario where a signal at danger is located at, or near to, the start of a planned wrong‑direction movement.
RAIB also identified four learning points. They cover staff understanding the impact that personal issues can have on themselves; the importance of staff taking the time to stop and check again, or continuing to challenge if unsure; reminding signallers that they should ask a competent person, if present, to check the path that they have set up for the wrong-direction movement; and reminding drivers that during a wrong‑direction movement, they can approach a junction at a speed slower than 15 mph (or 25 km/h) to give themselves more time to make sure, if possible, that any points, switch diamonds or swing-nose crossings are in the correct position.
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Published 13 April 2026
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