redreni
Established Member
I seem to recall seeing expert advice on here to the effect that if (for example) you have an off-peak return and your plans change so that you have to travel back in the evening peak, you need only pay the excess to convert the return portion of your ticket to anytime (rather than buy an entirely new ticket) and, furthermore, while you have to pay the excess fare at the earliest opportunity, you can start your journey if there's no facility to pay the excess fare at the station where you start your return leg? I'm sure I'll be corrected swiftly if that's not right!
At the moment most gated stations' ticket offices will be open during the evening peak. I'm sure there are exceptions, but as a general rule most stations are either ungated or have a ticket office with reasonable opening hours (or, at least, revenue inspectors with hand-held ticket machines who could excess a ticket for you). Which is fortunate because I'm not sure an off-peak ticket is going to get you through the barriers at peak time, will it?
If it becomes the norm for stations to have ticket barriers but no ticket office, how do people see this panning out? Will staff at the barriers have to adopt a policy of letting people through on an off-peak ticket if they say they intend to pay the excess on board?
Is there any sensible reason why online ticket retailers shouldn't be compelled to offer the option to excess an e-ticket after you've bought it? Simple off-peak to anytime or advance to off-peak or advance to anytime excesses seem like a reasonable thing that should be offered. But what about changes of route?
What practical advice would you give to a passenger who arrives at the station to start the return leg of their journey with the return portion of an off-peak ticket that they wish to excess to anytime if there is no ticket office, their ticket doesn't open the barrier and staff won't let them through?
Also, I presume the idea is that any station that loses its ticket office would also lose its excess fares window, if it has one?
At the moment most gated stations' ticket offices will be open during the evening peak. I'm sure there are exceptions, but as a general rule most stations are either ungated or have a ticket office with reasonable opening hours (or, at least, revenue inspectors with hand-held ticket machines who could excess a ticket for you). Which is fortunate because I'm not sure an off-peak ticket is going to get you through the barriers at peak time, will it?
If it becomes the norm for stations to have ticket barriers but no ticket office, how do people see this panning out? Will staff at the barriers have to adopt a policy of letting people through on an off-peak ticket if they say they intend to pay the excess on board?
Is there any sensible reason why online ticket retailers shouldn't be compelled to offer the option to excess an e-ticket after you've bought it? Simple off-peak to anytime or advance to off-peak or advance to anytime excesses seem like a reasonable thing that should be offered. But what about changes of route?
What practical advice would you give to a passenger who arrives at the station to start the return leg of their journey with the return portion of an off-peak ticket that they wish to excess to anytime if there is no ticket office, their ticket doesn't open the barrier and staff won't let them through?
Also, I presume the idea is that any station that loses its ticket office would also lose its excess fares window, if it has one?