This is a trade facing website. Visit the ACT's consumer site thecyclingexperts.co.uk for information and advice on cycling and find your local independent cycle retailer.

Search News

Results: 1-10 of 23


4 Feb 2026

British Transport Police (BTP) have abandoned a controversial policy that meant officers would not investigate bicycle thefts if a bike had been left outside a railway station for more than two...

2 Oct 2025

The British Transport Police (BTP) has confirmed it will not investigate thefts of bicycles left outside train stations if the bike has been unattended for more than two hours, a policy critics...

30 Sep 2025

Families took to the streets of Brighton and Hove for a mass bike ride to support a call  for safer, connected cycle routes and encouraging more people to take up cycling.

20 Mar 2025

Cytech, the internationally recognised training and accreditation scheme for bicycle mechanics, have partnered with Bristol-based charity Life Cycle to offer a range of bicycle mechanic...

15 Jul 2024

The Independent has published its list of the best electric bikes of 2024 after testing a series of folding, hybrid and city e-bikes.

17 Jun 2024

Independent family-owned cycle shop Arragon’s Cycles has teamed up with train operator Avanti West Coast  to make Penrith station a designated pick-up point for bike hire –...

8 May 2024

More than 400 children and adults have cycled through Brighton and Hove to ask for the streets to be made safe for cycling with a network of separated cycle lanes.

15 Jan 2024

Go Outdoors, which operates 75 stores across the UK, has announced an apprenticeship scheme involving Cytech training with the aim of addressing what it terms a nationwide shortage of...

3 Jan 2024

A new year means new challenges – but also new opportunities for cycle traders too and planning now so you can gain a competitive advantage and thrive in the warmer months will be key to...

13 Dec 2023

A bike shop that was created to provide jobs for ex-offenders leaving prison has now become a safe space for people to park their bikes.

Back to news menu

Bikes stolen after two-hour timeframe at a train station won’t lead to investigation, BTP confirms

Posted on in Business News , Cycles News

The British Transport Police (BTP) has confirmed it will not investigate thefts of bicycles left outside train stations if the bike has been unattended for more than two hours, a policy critics say amounts to the decriminalisation of most such thefts.

Pride in Place
Andrey Popov/stock.adobe.com

Under the new approach, the BTP will not review CCTV or follow up reports in cases where the two-hour window has passed, even though many bike shelters outside stations are under camera surveillance.

The BTP has claimed that investigating long-window bike thefts ties up officers’ time reviewing footage that is unlikely to lead to prosecution, diverting effort away from “investigating crimes which cause the most harm”.

According to analysis of last year’s statistics from insurance comparison firm Compare the Market, more than 14,000 bicycles were reported stolen from UK train stations over a three-year period, with the report highlighting a number of stations including Cambridge North, St Albans and Watford Junction as ‘hotspots’ for this type of crime. The report also notes that due to a lack of reporting this figure could in fact be higher.

Simon Feldman reported his bike stolen from outside Watford Junction; despite the bike being under a camera, the BTP refused to investigate because he had left it there for about ten hours.

Mr Feldman said: “They [BTP] wouldn’t investigate it…even though it’s right under a camera … if you have left your bike for more than two hours, they won’t investigate it.” He added he was “pretty shocked because what it’s doing effectively is decriminalising bike theft … how many people are being affected by this.”

Earlier this year in April, a Sussex cyclist, Alex Frampton, told of the rear wheel and gears being stolen while his bike was left overnight at Wivelsfield Station, and was later informed by BTP that they would not investigate because he could not specify the two-hour window in which the theft occurred. 

Speaking about the decision to not investigate bike theft outside train stations after two hours of it being left, a BTP spokesperson said: “Whilst we know that bike thefts are upsetting, inconvenient and potentially costly, there can often be limited opportunity for investigation. Our experience tells us at an early stage that there are some crimes that are unlikely to ever be solved – such as those without a clear estimate of time or location for the incident or if there is a lack of CCTV or witnesses.

“The more time our officers spend reviewing CCTV footage for these offences, the less time they have available for patrolling railway stations and trains, investigating crimes which cause the most harm. We will continue to apply a test of proportionality when determining investigation – looking at factors such as timeframes, witnesses, the availability of CCTV, the impact on the victim or whether there is a realistic prospect of a successful outcome. Any offence which is not investigated will still provide us with valuable intelligence, used to direct our patrols and operations.”

Back to news menu

Useful links

If you have any other queries please contact us.