anje
New Member
On 28th October, visiting Yorkshire, we decided to travel from Burley Park to York on the 20.11 departure.
No ticket machines, only card readers (which we, not being Yorkshire residents, didn't have) so we had to purchase through the Northern Rail website. Couldn't see any other option at the station such as "Promise to Pay".
I was expecting to pay a total of £9.10 (£5.50 + £3.60 Senior Railcard) but we paid £11.60 (£7.00 + £4.60 Senior Railcard).
OK, £2.50 isn't huge - but multiply that over several thousand each day. Northern's rationale is that £5.50 is an advance single, once a certain number of tickets have been sold at that price then a higher price is applied.
Is this correct? I can understand this logic as it is applied for long-distance trains, but for commuting/local services?
No ticket machines, only card readers (which we, not being Yorkshire residents, didn't have) so we had to purchase through the Northern Rail website. Couldn't see any other option at the station such as "Promise to Pay".
I was expecting to pay a total of £9.10 (£5.50 + £3.60 Senior Railcard) but we paid £11.60 (£7.00 + £4.60 Senior Railcard).
OK, £2.50 isn't huge - but multiply that over several thousand each day. Northern's rationale is that £5.50 is an advance single, once a certain number of tickets have been sold at that price then a higher price is applied.
Is this correct? I can understand this logic as it is applied for long-distance trains, but for commuting/local services?
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