Daily Express
Right-of-centre, middle-market daily tabloid – very similar in style, tone and format to its great rival, the Daily Mail
Daily Mail
A newspaper for Stepford wives
Daily Mirror
Daily red-top tabloid – the only national newspaper to support Labour consistently since 1945
Daily Sport (defunct)
Former stablemate of the Sunday Sport – an unapologetically trashy tabloid, with no pretensions at all to hard news coverage
Daily Star
Daily red-top tabloid launched in 1978 with the aim of competing for The Sun‘s readership
Daily Star Sunday
Sunday companion to Express Newspapers’ red-top national tabloid the Daily Star, founded in 2002
Financial Times
Financial and economic daily broadsheet with an international reach, famously printed on salmon-pink newsprint
i
Concise quality tabloid sold to commuters and “readers and lapsed readers” lacking time to read a full-sized newspaper
Metro
The UK’s first urban national newspaper, first launched in the London area in 1999 and now distributed in several British towns and cities
Midweek Sport
Midweek companion title to the Sunday Sport, with a similar content based largely on soft porn
Morning Star
Historically the organ of the Communist Party of Great Britain but broke with it in 1988
News of the World (defunct)
The English-speaking world’s biggest-selling Sunday newspaper until it closed in 2011 over the phone-hacking scandal
Sunday Express
Just like its weekday cousin – fundamentally conservative, aiming at a prosperous, none too serious readership
Sunday Mirror
Like its daily namesake, a left-wing populist tabloid with little in the way of hard news
Sunday People
Left-wing red-top tabloid published on Sundays. Very little to choose between it and its more successful sister paper, the Sunday Mirror