Vagueness probably not necessary, but just in case somebody from my local TOC is monitoring the forums and is annoyed by the potential savings, particularly given point (3) below...
I commute between the station where I live (A) and the station closest to my office (B).
If I want to get a return, then a straightforward A-B return is cheapest, that's nice and straightforward.
However due to the nature of my work it's (becoming) somewhat common that I only want a single (and will return/get dropped off at my home by another method of transport).
It's cheaper for me to get a single from A-C rather than A-B, where C is a station, near B, which can only be accessed by changing at B. The cheaper single is listed on NRE as an Anytime ticket.
Questions:
1) Since it's an Anytime ticket, which as far as I can see allows fully flexible break of journey, starting/ending journey short, I'm not breaking any rules by using it to travel only A-B and never completing my change onto the B-C leg?
2) When I find the fare on NRE - or a ticket booking website - they only provide itinaries for some of the A-B trains. I assume that's because trains B-C are only 1tph, and so they're not bothering to suggest earlier trains from A-B which would only mean waiting longer for the same B-C connection. However I don't care about that of course. Again, since it's an Anytime ticket, I presume I'm OK to take any A-B train?
3) The website of my local TOC won't sell me the cheap A-C Anytime ticket (they list a higher price than NRE - the same price as an A-B single, not sure if that's a coincidence or not!), but the website of a different TOC will sell it to me at the NRE indicated price (which makes it worth my while). I don't know yet what price my local TOC's TVMs indicate, but I may go and find out now the question occurs to me...
3a) Is this indicative of some kind of easement or pricing rule that my local TOC isn't applying correctly? Or a rule that NRE/other TOC aren't applying correctly but should be?!
3b) In the second case, presumably once I have an Anytime ticket in my hand, I'm completely clear to travel even if I ended up paying a lower price than would have been correct - any discrepancy is the ticket retailer's problem?
FWIW, the savings involved are likely to add up to a £100-200 per year - so not massive money, but enough that I'm willing to undergo the inconvenience of not just buying the simplest tickets / potentially having to buy in advance and collect...!
I commute between the station where I live (A) and the station closest to my office (B).
If I want to get a return, then a straightforward A-B return is cheapest, that's nice and straightforward.
However due to the nature of my work it's (becoming) somewhat common that I only want a single (and will return/get dropped off at my home by another method of transport).
It's cheaper for me to get a single from A-C rather than A-B, where C is a station, near B, which can only be accessed by changing at B. The cheaper single is listed on NRE as an Anytime ticket.
Questions:
1) Since it's an Anytime ticket, which as far as I can see allows fully flexible break of journey, starting/ending journey short, I'm not breaking any rules by using it to travel only A-B and never completing my change onto the B-C leg?
2) When I find the fare on NRE - or a ticket booking website - they only provide itinaries for some of the A-B trains. I assume that's because trains B-C are only 1tph, and so they're not bothering to suggest earlier trains from A-B which would only mean waiting longer for the same B-C connection. However I don't care about that of course. Again, since it's an Anytime ticket, I presume I'm OK to take any A-B train?
3) The website of my local TOC won't sell me the cheap A-C Anytime ticket (they list a higher price than NRE - the same price as an A-B single, not sure if that's a coincidence or not!), but the website of a different TOC will sell it to me at the NRE indicated price (which makes it worth my while). I don't know yet what price my local TOC's TVMs indicate, but I may go and find out now the question occurs to me...
3a) Is this indicative of some kind of easement or pricing rule that my local TOC isn't applying correctly? Or a rule that NRE/other TOC aren't applying correctly but should be?!
3b) In the second case, presumably once I have an Anytime ticket in my hand, I'm completely clear to travel even if I ended up paying a lower price than would have been correct - any discrepancy is the ticket retailer's problem?
FWIW, the savings involved are likely to add up to a £100-200 per year - so not massive money, but enough that I'm willing to undergo the inconvenience of not just buying the simplest tickets / potentially having to buy in advance and collect...!