I travelled from Rugby to Euston in March with my partner who applied a railcard to her ticket on my phone (assuming that’s fine as she has a railcard and it only applies to 1 ticket so she claims)
I then travelled from Nuneaton to Euston for two again last week, and since I booked it myself (never get trains so don’t understand it much) it was full price (no railcard discount seemed to be applied). You can see the extent that I take trains in my booking history. A total of 4 trips. I don’t understand how these apps work very well but you can clearly see the difference in price from the first trip to Euston compared to the second with no discount applied.
I then travelled a 15 minute journey from Coventry to Birmingham New Street on Saturday and was checked by an inspector at the gate who asked to see my railcard (I had no idea the railcard discount applied) and was given a fine.
It showed the discounted price on my app before purchasing but I just assumed it would be something to do with different peak times or whatever. I wouldn’t know what the price of a ticket should be. In a rush (you can see I booked the ticket 12 minutes before departure on the journey to the station) I didn’t know it was a railcard discount and it must’ve applied my partners railcard itself on the search as I didn’t apply it?
Has this happened before to anyone else? Has a railcard automatically applied itself? I’m confused how it’s happened as I must have removed it to purchase the tickets from Nuneaton to Euston in April. Im clearly not interested in saving £2 or whatever it is on a short fare ticket when I wasn’t bothered about fair evading on a journey from Nuneaton to Euston which is obviously substantially more.
It’s only a £50 fine but will most likely be more now because as soon as he printed and handed me the fine I scrunched it up and binned it right in front of him. I have no respect for these train companies who are probably non-uk owned, and revenue protection officers upholding foreign investment companies extracting profits and taking advantage of everyday people who want to save a couple quid during a cost of living crisis (I’m not one of them people I will pay full price and I’m definitely not risking a £50 fine over saving £3). Sorry if I offend anyone.
I’m obviously not sorry for accidentally committing fraud over £3 but just want to know if this is something worth appealing and does it hold any weight. Would really prefer not to cave to these leeches out of principle.
I then travelled from Nuneaton to Euston for two again last week, and since I booked it myself (never get trains so don’t understand it much) it was full price (no railcard discount seemed to be applied). You can see the extent that I take trains in my booking history. A total of 4 trips. I don’t understand how these apps work very well but you can clearly see the difference in price from the first trip to Euston compared to the second with no discount applied.
I then travelled a 15 minute journey from Coventry to Birmingham New Street on Saturday and was checked by an inspector at the gate who asked to see my railcard (I had no idea the railcard discount applied) and was given a fine.
It showed the discounted price on my app before purchasing but I just assumed it would be something to do with different peak times or whatever. I wouldn’t know what the price of a ticket should be. In a rush (you can see I booked the ticket 12 minutes before departure on the journey to the station) I didn’t know it was a railcard discount and it must’ve applied my partners railcard itself on the search as I didn’t apply it?
Has this happened before to anyone else? Has a railcard automatically applied itself? I’m confused how it’s happened as I must have removed it to purchase the tickets from Nuneaton to Euston in April. Im clearly not interested in saving £2 or whatever it is on a short fare ticket when I wasn’t bothered about fair evading on a journey from Nuneaton to Euston which is obviously substantially more.
It’s only a £50 fine but will most likely be more now because as soon as he printed and handed me the fine I scrunched it up and binned it right in front of him. I have no respect for these train companies who are probably non-uk owned, and revenue protection officers upholding foreign investment companies extracting profits and taking advantage of everyday people who want to save a couple quid during a cost of living crisis (I’m not one of them people I will pay full price and I’m definitely not risking a £50 fine over saving £3). Sorry if I offend anyone.
I’m obviously not sorry for accidentally committing fraud over £3 but just want to know if this is something worth appealing and does it hold any weight. Would really prefer not to cave to these leeches out of principle.