G3CWI
Veteran
- Location
- Macclesfield
All of the posts above seem to confirm my view that local rail travel is very expensive when such bargains exist on long distance routes.
All of the posts above seem to confirm my view that local rail travel is very expensive when such bargains exist on long distance routes.
If you're happy to travel off-peak and use an Oyster card*, the most you'll pay for a single journey within the TFL zones is £3.90. That will take you from a rural town in Buckinghamshire to a rural town in Essex, or from the edge of the North Downs to the edge of Bedfordshire.All of the posts above seem to confirm my view that local rail travel is very expensive when such bargains exist on long distance routes.
If you're happy to travel off-peak and use an Oyster card*, the most you'll pay for a single journey within the TFL zones is £3.90. That will take you from a rural town in Buckinghamshire to a rural town in Essex, or from the edge of the North Downs to the edge of Bedfordshire.
*and frankly you're daft not to - a 5 minute single without an Oyster card costs £4.70.
Long journeys - yes, there are bargains. I am not so sure that this applies to shorter journeys though. Macclesfield to Chester return is £18 - which is more than the cost of the petrol to drive there (I know that's not the only cost of driving).
On that route the price is the same however far in advance I look.
Train travel uis entirely predictable, price wise if you bother to understand the system.Train travel is unpredictable, price wise. Me and son are going to london (from Sheffield) in a few weeks. I was surprised to get a return ticket some where around £35 (with friends and family railcard).
We were looking to go to Cornwall for a summer holiday in the summer, but found the fare to be prohibitively expensive, so we're off to Robin Hoods Bay instead, which is better anyway!
Not always necesserily the case. Last year my Mum tried the trick of ringing the train company every day for a couple of weeks at around the 12 week before she wanted to travel time, wanting to travel from Sheffield to Weymouth.Train travel uis entirely predictable, price wise if you bother to understand the system.
the cheap train tickets only go on sale at most 12 weeks in advance of travel, so it is no wonder you are finding the prices to Cornwall in summer holidays eye watering. The only fares available are the non discounted ones. Book 12 weeks before travel and you will find much cheaper fares are available
Sara read what I posted. ie train tickest are released not more than 12 weeks. in advance. They are not always released that far ahead.Not always necesserily the case. Last year my Mum tried the trick of ringing the train company every day for a couple of weeks at around the 12 week before she wanted to travel time, wanting to travel from Sheffield to Weymouth.
She was told every day that the cheap tickets "hadn't been released" until lo and behold, she rang one day and miraculously all the cheap tickets had been sold!
And of course, such a silly pricing system makes rail travel expensive for those who don't have such advance notice of when they'll need to travel.
It shouldn't really be this hard!
Very true, last summer I travelled from Liverpool to Plymouth at very short notice. It was going to cost me £268 return but when I got to Lime Street station in Liverpool the ticket clerk told me to wait a couple of minutes while she looked at price options, she broke my journey down into about 6 smaller ones and it cost me £129 return. I still only had to make the one change at Birmingham. What fantastic customer service that was.It is often cheaper to split your journeys into several 'legs' with separate tickets. As an example - I have saved over £20 by buying Hebden Bridge to Leeds, Leeds to Derby, Derby to Coventry, rather than Hebden Bridge to Coventry. I caught the same trains that I would have done with the more expensive single ticket.
There isn't a lot of help to work out the best combinations. I just check them manually on the National Rail website.
In normal life we don't pre plan most simple trips weeks in advance to be able to book cheaper tickets.
All the the websites offer cheap fares up to 70% off - but as far as I can see they all offer exactly the same fares. I was looking to do some day trips with the bike using the train but it looks rather expensive and there appears to be no real competition. Are there any bargains to be had?