Responding to today's (5 March) 5.9% annual rail fare rise,
, from Campaign for Better
Transport, said:
"Pressing ahead with the largest fare rise in a decade will do
nothing to encourage more people to take the train or help people
struggling to meet rising travel costs, and it certainly doesn't
make up for a year of disruption on the railways. This rise is
especially frustrating given the cuts to fuel duty and air
passenger duty. Instead of discounting the most polluting forms
of transport, it's about time the Government based transport
costs on carbon emissions: the lower the emissions, the lower the
cost."
Campaign for Better Transport analysis of season ticket costs
reveals that the average season ticket into London has gone up by
£281 today, with some commuters facing increases of up to £380
(Southampton to London). Commuting into Leeds will now cost on
average £58 more from today; commuting into Birmingham has gone
up on average £124; people travelling into Liverpool each day
will have to fork out an extra £84 on average; commuters heading
to Bristol will be paying on average £139 more; and the average
season ticket into Manchester stations has gone up by £96 today.
ENDS
See examples of 2023 season ticket
increases for passengers travelling into London
See examples of 2023 season ticket
increases for passengers travelling to regional
stations
Notes to Editors
Rail fares went up by 5.9% today. This is the annual fare rise
which this year was postponed until March and was capped below
RPI at 5.9%. This still represents the highest fare rise in a
decade (fares rose at 6% in 2012).
Regulated rail fares, including standard day returns, season
tickets and most commuter fares, make up almost half (45 per cent) of all fares
and increases are set by the Government. In previous years, fares
have risen by RPI, based on the previous July's RPI figure. This
year, the Government announced it
would peg the 2023 fare rise to the previous July's average
earnings growth instead of RPI.
In May 2021, the Government published the long-awaited Williams-Shapps Plan for
Rail, which promised a fundamental reorganisation of the rail
sector and a 'root and branch' reform of the ticketing system to
provide a better deal for rail passengers.