What a surprise! The ONLY good thing about the September stealth rises changes has been scuppered!
No it hasn't. Granted the single fares will be somewhat more than now, but they will remain significantly cheaper that before the change and will likely still offer plenty of opportunities for mixing and matching anytime/
OP▸ /
SOP▸ /advance tickets to save money.
My single fare from London to Swindon has gone up by ^14.50. I was paying ^20 booking in advance, now it will be ^34.50. I think this is outrageous. I don't have the luxury of being able to travel when I like. Compared to French, Spanish and Portuguese train fares FGW▸ charges way too much - I think ^20 is just about reasonable for a short journey such as London to Swindon, anything more is simply greed. II wonder what bonuses FGW bosses are getting this year? I have never had a bonus in my job, and feel that I am completely at the mercy of greedy companies like FGW.
soupowl, sorry, you are wrong. Firstly, GBP34.50 for a journey of that length right in the middle of the evening peak seems eminently reasonable to me (GBP 20.00 sound like an absolute bargain). Secondly, you are NOT comparing like with like - you are comparing a more expensive, "higher tier" Advance purchase fare with what you are currently buying. As various posters have already pointed out here and in the duplicate thread you started about exactly the same issue, there are still plenty of advance purchase fares available at a similar or even lower level to what you pay now, so I really don't think you have a valid argument.
Yet again, somebody raises the old chestnut of how all European railway systems are supposedly cheaper than the
UK▸ 's. Firstly, that's not really correct. In fact the UK on average has the cheapest intercity rail fares (cheaper-end Advance tickets, exactly what you have been using for your journey) in Europe. You have been getting a very good deal at GBP 20.00 right in the middle of the evening peak for that journey. That aside, it's also true to say that Britain has the most expensive intercity fares in Europe, when you consider Anytime tickets, but they are not what you are using. It's a strange function of the current fares structure that our lowest fares are the cheapest in Europe and our most expensive are the dearest.
Finally, there is the issue of the massive government subsidies that European railways receive - many of the fares paid on those systems are simply not commercial without huge subsidy. The fares you pay on Britain's railways today are
largely the result of government policy rather than "greed" on the part of the train operators, and non-specific frothing about how it's outrageous that you can't travel for a pittance on a fairly long journey right in the middle of rush hour does no-one any favours. To quote C P Scott, "Comment is free, but facts are sacred".