In fact, if I bought my Advance ticket in advance at a ticket office I would be paying LESS than a customer of theTrainline buying the ticket at the same time.
According to the adverts,
"People booking saved an average of 43%"
How did they come up with this number? Did they just take the price of advance tickets bought on their website and compare it with open tickets?
In fact, if I bought my Advance ticket in advance at a ticket office I would be paying LESS than a customer of theTrainline buying the ticket at the same time. Who's the sheep now?
How did we work this out?
We took a random sample of transactions made on thetrainline which included a range of ticket types & national routes.
We compared prices paid on thetrainline (including the booking fee) with the cheapest fare available for that journey if bought at the station on the day of travel.
The average saving made by customers buying Advance fares on thetrainline was 43%.
Advance fares are not available on every route, but they are available on the vast majority of our most popular routes.
Savings are available on Advance fares only, but thetrainline makes it easy to find cheaper tickets and make savings: the cheapest available ticket for a journey is highlighted in orange and we have some handy tools to make finding cheap tickets quicker and easier - click here to find out more.
No idea, but I consider the irony of calling people who buy at the ticket office "sheep" very amusing, given all theTrainline's customers are also sheep for being taken in by their marketing, as they could get their tickets elsewhere cheaper in virtually all cases.
In fact, if I bought my Advance ticket in advance at a ticket office I would be paying LESS than a customer of theTrainline buying the ticket at the same time. Who's the sheep now?
Yes, but if we look at the big picture, on-line purchasing of tickets has been an enormous benefit to passengers and TOCs. Passengers can spend time in their own home, looking at the alternatives, and coming up with the tickets that best suit their needs and budget. TOCs can optimise loadings and get their money sooner. Queues are reduced at tickets offices, benefiting everyone. I am sure that much of the growth in recent years is down to people being able to plan journeys and buy tickets from home.
Wooly advertising by the Trainline...??
...coat...!!
It is a good thing, BUT theTrainline charge more in all cases and you are always better off buying from either the ticket office, or the website of a Toc.Yes, but if we look at the big picture, on-line purchasing of tickets has been an enormous benefit to passengers and TOCs. Passengers can spend time in their own home, looking at the alternatives, and coming up with the tickets that best suit their needs and budget. TOCs can optimise loadings and get their money sooner. Queues are reduced at tickets offices, benefiting everyone. I am sure that much of the growth in recent years is down to people being able to plan journeys and buy tickets from home.
Similarly, Red Spotted Hanky give points, but with their minimum additional charge £1, you'd have to spend £100 per transaction to even match the price of the Tocs websites or the ticket office! http://www.railforums.co.uk/showthread.php?t=34648Don't forget you can get Nectar points on purchases over £25 on the Trainline, if you click through from the Nectar web site. Doubt this offsets the additional costs though.
I will admit to telling people on other (non-rail related) forums to avoid the TTL, and use TOC or booking offices instead. I think a recent survey last year showed that 70% of people (or something close to that) preferred buying via staff than online...
Out of curiosity, what is the station featured on the advert, it doesn't look very British (the stock definitely ain't), I originally thought Nottingham for the concourse, but I swear one of the departure board reads 'Edinburgh'!
I wonder how many times people buy a more expensive combo of APs than the walk-on. It is easily done especially if you book your outward and return on different dates because of when bookings open.
Out of curiosity, what is the station featured on the advert, it doesn't look very British (the stock definitely ain't), I originally thought Nottingham for the concourse, but I swear one of the departure board reads 'Edinburgh'!
Mind you, if you book early in advance you do get great discounts from the Trainline. I'm going Bedford-St. Pancras-Euston-Stafford. And the Euston to Stafford was £3.60 each way. I went First Class on all but the first leg, and its £49 in total, when that should have been £252 for the First Class seats if I walked up to the desk and asked for that. So it is good value in some cases![]()
Mind you, if you book early in advance you do get great discounts from the Trainline. I'm going Bedford-St. Pancras-Euston-Stafford. And the Euston to Stafford was £3.60 each way. I went First Class on all but the first leg, and its £49 in total, when that should have been £252 for the First Class seats if I walked up to the desk and asked for that. So it is good value in some cases
Was there a special offer on then? 'This month only no booking fee' or something similar?![]()
I don't think the Trainline can do any deals, it can't cut fares because it doesn;t set any, and its profits are based on the small amount of commission it receives plus any profit it can make form the charges.
In contrast, East Coast will receive all of the revenue from its own advance tickets, and so cna afford to offer additional discounts on those tickets.
I don;t really know what the gerneral public thinks about it. Judging from people I;ve spoken to, manuy think it is some sort of magic site that automatically finds you cheapest possible tickets that can't be obtained anywhere else. Such is the power of their advertising I suppose!
I believe a complaint about their advertising failed at the ASA, though I can't begin to fathom on what grounds!
The wording in the advert would be enough to get round the ASA I'd have thought: it says that "Are you still paying full price for your train ticket on the day? People buying Advanced fare tickets at the trainline.com saved an average of 43%", whilst the small print on the screen says "Savings available on Advanced fares only. Advanced fares not available on every route."
Argh! No, you didn't get a good deal by booking on theTrainline, you paid more than you would have done elsewhere.Mind you, if you book early in advance you do get great discounts from the Trainline. I'm going Bedford-St. Pancras-Euston-Stafford. And the Euston to Stafford was £3.60 each way. I went First Class on all but the first leg, and its £49 in total, when that should have been £252 for the First Class seats if I walked up to the desk and asked for that. So it is good value in some cases![]()
Argh! No, you didn't get a good deal by booking on theTrainline, you paid more than you would have done elsewhere.