On the 18th May the new revised fares will be coming into effect on the National Network. Some companies have withdrawn some tickets and replaced them with more expensive tickets.
In January 2008 the overall allowable average increase for regulated fares Peak day and Season Tickets was 4.8%, with variations by flow and ticket type up to a maximum 9.8% increase.
Some Train Companies did not use the full yearly increase and therefore will be increasing the tickets to the yearly maximum this time around.
National Express East Coast (NXEC) will be increasing their already expensive tickets some more in May. We have also received reports (from an unnamed travel centre clerk) that they will charge everyone without an advance ticket a seat reservation charge of £1 for each seat reserved. Is this to stop the season ticket holders reserving seats, or is it to pay for for a new seat reservation printer so they can finally put out reservations 07:20 at Peterborough and late night services out of Kings Cross?
As if you were not already confused by the huge number of different ticket names, the powers that be have decided to change the names yet again.
So say goodbye to the SuperSaver, the Saver, the Cheap Day Return, the Standard Day Return and say hello to Super Off-Peak and Anytime.
The new ticket types are as follows.
| Date | Existing Fare Name | New Fare Name |
|---|---|---|
| From 18th May | Leisure Advance Business Advance Value Advance SuperAdvance Apex etc |
Advance |
| From 7 September | First/Standard Open Single/Return etc | Anytime |
| From 7 September | First/Standard Day Single/Return etc | Anytime Day |
| From 7 September | Saver | Off-Peak |
| From 7 September | Cheap Day etc | Off-Peak Day |
| From 7 September | Evening Fare Pricebuster SuperSaver Just 15 etc |
Super Off-Peak Super Off-Peak Day |
Severe weather conditions have been forecast by the Met Office for the UK for Friday 1 and Saturday 2 February. The weather warning is valid from 0001 Friday 1st until 0600 Saturday 2nd February.
The Met Office continues to forecast colder weather to spread southwards across the UK during Friday and at first on Saturday giving heavy snow in places. Areas most at risk include Scotland and parts of Northern Ireland from early on Friday, extending to northern and central England and much of Wales on Friday afternoon, and perhaps into southern areas on Friday evening. Northern areas could see accumulations of 10cm of snow, with up to 20cm on higher ground, and blizzard conditions and snow drifts could occur in strong winds. Southern areas could see accumulations of 2 to 5cm of snow by Saturday morning. Disruption to transport and power networks is likely and the public are advised to take extra care. This warning will be updated by 1200 Friday 1st February unless superseded by Flash warnings.
Any opinions expressed are that of The Ticket Collector and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of any of the Train Companies mentioned, and/or other companies.
Programs and data held on TheTicketCollector.co.uk and systems are PRIVATE PROPERTY and are not to be copied except under our terms. Unauthorised access is prohibited and is contrary to the Computer Misuse Act 1990, which may result in criminal offences and a claim for damages.
To Top of Page
Entries feed.
Valid XHTML and CSS.
15 queries. 0.260 seconds.
Powered by WordPress with Pool theme design by Borja Fernandez.