Rail fares rise by 2.7%, hitting millions of commuters
- Published
- comments
Millions of commuters will have to pay an average of 2.7% more for train tickets from today.
The rise, announced by industry body the Rail Delivery Group in November, is lower than the 3.1% increase at the start of last year.
Train companies say it is the third year in a row that average fares have been held below RPI - the inflation measure on which rises are based.
But many commuters face an increase of more than £100 for annual passes.
In Wales, fares have bucked the trend of rising prices in England and Scotland, with an average fall of 1% this year.
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said the government was committed to "putting passengers first", by funding trials for flexible fares, for example.
He said he planned to tackle the "fragmented" system and had begun the process to end the franchise for the rail service Northern, whose performance was "completely unacceptable".
A final decision on the Northern franchise is expected in a "matter of weeks", according to BBC transport correspondent Tom Burridge, as passengers said they would be "very happy" to see it end.
Mr Shapps told BBC Breakfast that the fare increases enabled investment in the railways that would yield improvements. "You can judge me on this at the end of the year," he said.
"These changes are going to take time but I think people will see things moving in the right direction."
But Labour's shadow transport secretary, Andy McDonald, said the rise showed passengers were "once again paying more for less under the Tories".
Independent watchdog Transport Focus says fewer than half of train journeys (47%) are rated as satisfactory value for money by passengers.
The watchdog's director, David Sidebottom, said: "After a year of pretty poor performance in some areas, passengers just want a consistent day-to-day service they can rely on and a better chance of getting a seat."
He encouraged passengers to claim compensation for eligible delays in order to "offset" the cost of fare rises.
Some annual passes go up by more than £100
£132Reading to London. Total £4,736
£118Gloucester to Birmingham. Total £4,356
£116Glasgow to Edinburgh. Total £4,200
However, Robert Nisbet, director of nations and regions for Rail Delivery Group, said rail companies were investing in improving journeys while holding fare increases below inflation.
He said 2020 will see 1,000 extra weekly services and 1,000 more carriages added to Britain's rail fleet.
"There is a record level of investment going into the railway at the moment," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
"For people who do suffer from poor punctuality in areas of the country, that could be for a variety of different reasons, we apologise. We are looking at trying to make punctuality much better across the board," he said.
Official statistics show that just over one in three trains failed to arrive on time in July, August and September 2019, although that figure was an improvement on the previous year.
Passenger complaints
About 40% of annual rail price rises are regulated by governments in England, Scotland and Wales. They are pegged to the Retail Prices Index (RPI) inflation measure for the previous July. Other fare rises are decided by train companies.
RPI inflation was 2.8% last year.
But RPI inflation is generally higher than the most widely watched measure of inflation, the Consumer Prices Index (CPI).
Passenger groups have repeatedly called for the system to be changed since RPI inflation was abandoned by the UK Statistics Authority as a national statistic in 2013.
Emily Yates, a freelance writer from Brighton who co-founded the Association of British Commuters, said the annual rises feel like "Groundhog Day" and a "complete charade".
"Every year, we ask for a fares freeze, the government says no, and the rail industry defends the decision," she said.
Protests will be held against the fare increase on Thursday, including a demonstration outside London King's Cross station.
The rallies come as the Trades Union Congress (TUC) releases research suggesting fares have risen by twice as much as wages in the last 10 years.
The TUC said someone earning an average salary in the UK would have to spend 16% of their wages for a season ticket from Chelmsford to London (£511 a month), but similar commutes would cost 2% of the average salary in France, and 4% in Germany and Belgium.
- Published20 November 2019
- Published5 September 2019
- Published30 November 2019