• Our new ticketing site is now live! Using either this or the original site (both powered by TrainSplit) helps support the running of the forum with every ticket purchase! Find out more and ask any questions/give us feedback in this thread!

£2 Price Cap on fares in England - Now extended beyond October 2023

Status
Not open for further replies.

johncrossley

Established Member
Joined
30 Mar 2021
Messages
3,548
Location
London
I can see a case for the London approach to be to charge a Tube fare if connecting to a bus, but £2 would be for bus only journeys. Trouble is that would require tapping out. £1.65 is expensive as an add on in a supposedly integrated network but very low for a bus only fare.

I believe TfGM plan to charge the maximum of the bus and tram fare for combined bus/tram journeys after bus franchising starts. Touching out is done in other countries so I wouldn't rule it out.
 
Sponsor Post - registered members do not see these adverts; click here to register, or click here to log in
R

RailUK Forums

Megafuss

Member
Joined
5 May 2018
Messages
728
Location
Spalding
How would any reimbursement scheme work for this? A £2 fare for a journey of 1 mile is not going to need the same support as £2 for 20 miles. By distance? Based on the current fare (which would disproportionately benefit operators perceived to offer poor value for money)? Get it wrong and a lot of routes are going to disappear (though that'll probably be the result anyway because the scheme will almost certainly be underfunded).

The other pitfall I can see is that the introduction of these "cheap" single fares will be used as an excuse either to withdraw or raise the price of period tickets, through which many regular users already pay less than £2 per journey.
This is all going to hinge on how operators are reimbursed for revenue lost because customers have switched from a weekly ticket to a £2 a trip ticket. God knows how that would be worked out. Somebody will have to build a very fancy spreadsheet to work it all out
 

Andyh82

Established Member
Joined
19 May 2014
Messages
4,020
I could see that happening. Bus operators have focussed on period tickets for years (how often do you see the single fare advertised on the side of a bus, it’s generally always ‘travel all day for X, travel all week for Y’

Politicians don’t think that way, they always look at single fares and always add them up individually to make a headline (Andy Burnham has regularly mentioned someone in GM who travels on two buses and a tram to work, so adds up three different fares x 2 x 5 days a week)

Like how on the railways they always look at the walk up fare, ignoring advances
 

miklcct

On Moderation
Joined
2 May 2021
Messages
5,017
Location
Cricklewood
I can see a case for the London approach to be to charge a Tube fare if connecting to a bus, but £2 would be for bus only journeys. Trouble is that would require tapping out. £1.65 is expensive as an add on in a supposedly integrated network but very low for a bus only fare.
The bus only fare may be cheap, but overall transport in London is very expensive. If you change from a bus to a tube that is *really* expensive. Minimum £4.15 for any such journey including Zone 1. That might be possibly the most expensive in the world for the distance, comparing to other world cities. Taking the bus the whole way instead just takes too long and you shouldn't have to do that anyway if you have a properly integrated transport system.
The effect is that, I can always reach the day cap if I make such journey for a return, making the day cap the effective price for a return journey. Therefore I suggest that an integrated fare should be introduced while raising the day caps such that most passengers won't be capped unless they are making many journeys.

I could see that happening. Bus operators have focussed on period tickets for years (how often do you see the single fare advertised on the side of a bus, it’s generally always ‘travel all day for X, travel all week for Y’

Politicians don’t think that way, they always look at single fares and always add them up individually to make a headline (Andy Burnham has regularly mentioned someone in GM who travels on two buses and a tram to work, so adds up three different fares x 2 x 5 days a week)

Like how on the railways they always look at the walk up fare, ignoring advances
Period tickets are useless for me as I don't travel often. It's the carnet fare (if available) which is relevant for me.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Wolfie

Established Member
Joined
17 Aug 2010
Messages
7,012
The effect is that, I can always reach the day cap if I make such journey for a return, making the day cap the effective price for a return journey. Therefore I suggest that an integrated fare should be introduced while raising the day caps such that most passengers won't be capped unless they are making many journeys.


Period tickets are useless for me as I don't travel often. It's the carnet fare (if available) which is relevant for me.
Daily caps are set with reference to the Travelcard cost too. What your proposal in the first para would likely to is to encourage more people to buy a day Travelcard which would doubtless be cheaper.

Any proposal to change the price of Day Travelcards has a direct impact on all period Travelcards so would and should be opposed.
 

miklcct

On Moderation
Joined
2 May 2021
Messages
5,017
Location
Cricklewood
Daily caps are set with reference to the Travelcard cost too. What your proposal in the first para would likely to is to encourage more people to buy a day Travelcard which would doubtless be cheaper.

Any proposal to change the price of Day Travelcards has a direct impact on all period Travelcards so would and should be opposed.
The multiplier of the period Travelcard compared to day Travelcard is too high in my opinion (I think about 4x is appropriate). Therefore I think the price of the day Travelcard should be increased but not the period Travelcard.
 

Deerfold

Veteran Member
Joined
26 Nov 2009
Messages
13,172
Location
Yorkshire
First in West Yorkshire moved to a £2 single fare a few months ago, but adjusted their ticket range so that a weekly ticket is £20 (the previous Leeds/Bradford/Halifax/Huddersfield only tickets were withdrawn at the same time).

At around the same time I started working one day a week at home, so it’s no longer worthwhile fo r me to buy a period ticket as I only need a single each way, so in a normal week I only pay £16 unless I know I’m going somewhere at the weekend. Quite a few of our local services are provided by Transdev so I tend to buy the £5.50 Metro ticket at the weekends instead anyway.

If you travel both days (and/or Friday evenings) don't forget the £8.50 Weekender, which can be an absolute bargain - valid from 1800 on Friday, for the next 54 hours.

== Doublepost prevention - post automatically merged: ==

I'm wondering how this will affect ENCTS pass reimbursement. Many schemes depend heavily on the value of single fares.
 
Last edited:

Dai Corner

Established Member
Joined
20 Jul 2015
Messages
6,784
I'm wondering how this will affect ENCTS pass reimbursement. Many schemes depend heavily on the value of single fares
I'd imagine it would stay the same as it is now. When Newport had a Welsh Government funded free travel month we were still supposed to scan our concessionary passes. Drivers counted other passengers via the ticket machines (and collected fares for dogs!). The reimbursement agreement has not been disclosed.
 

robbob700

Member
Joined
17 Aug 2009
Messages
139
the multiplier of the period Travelcard compared to day Travelcard is too high in my opinion (I think about 4x is appropriate). Therefore I think the price of the day Travelcard should be increased but not the period Travelcard.
The multiplier is deliberately 5X so that part-time workers do not pay proportionally more when they do not work 5 days a week.
 

robbob700

Member
Joined
17 Aug 2009
Messages
139
As the society moves away from 5-day commute such multiplier has become outdated.
What actually happened was that the daily price was reduced to one fifth of the weekly price for precisely that reason.
 

JaJaWa

Established Member
Joined
14 Feb 2013
Messages
1,713
Location

That’s a fare price: bus trips will cost no more than £2​

April 19 2020, 12.01am BST
Stagecoach charges £10 for the 60-mile ride from Oxford to Bedford

Stagecoach charges £10 for the 60-mile ride from Oxford to Bedford
ALAMY
The scheme for a single journey, which Downing Street has been working on since April, is intended to address a long-standing anomaly whereby bus services in England are more expensive and less frequent than in London, where pay-as-you-go fares are a flat rate of £1.65 if made within an hour.

Across Europe, governments are slashing the price of public transport. In Ireland fares have been cut by 20 per cent, while in Germany, a ticket costing €9 (£7.62) gives unlimited travel for a month in June, July or August on local or regional public transport.

A source familiar with the scheme said: “The value of an eye-catching initiative like a £2 flat fare is that the government can really get behind it and say, ‘We are helping you over the winter’.”

Its main purpose is to reduce the price of trips in rural areas and to city centres from outer suburbs, for commuting, shopping, leisure and education, but there will also be bargains on longer journeys.

People in Leeds can enjoy the seaside in Whitby 77 miles away for only £2

People in Leeds can enjoy the seaside in Whitby 77 miles away for only £2
ALAMY
The price of the 80-mile trip from Peterborough to Norwich with First Excel is normally £12 for a day ticket and takes three hours 15 minutes but will be cut to £2. The 77-mile trip from Leeds to the coastal town of Whitby normally costs £19 for a day ticket on the Coastliner and takes more than three hours, while Stagecoach charges £10 for the 60-mile ride from Oxford to Bedford, which takes two hours and 20 minutes.

The price cap will not apply to long-distance scheduled coach services, and nor will it apply to Scotland or Wales.

Even before the surge in energy prices, reducing the cost of everyday public transport outside London was seen as a vote-winner. In the government’s Bus Back Better strategy, published in March 2021, Boris Johnson declared: “Better buses will be one of our major acts of levelling-up.” He added: “We want simple, cheap flat fares.”

City-wide price caps of £2 are being devised by Labour mayors, including Tracy Brabin in West Yorkshire, Andy Burnham in Greater Manchester and Steve Rotheram in Liverpool City Region. They will begin in the autumn and remain for three years.

Bus travel has been in long-term decline since the 1950s, and half the population take the bus less than once a year. The most regular passengers are those with concessionary tickets, such as those who have reached state pension age, or 60 if they live in London.

Some bus operators welcome the £2 cap but are worried that it will be difficult to wean passengers off low prices when the scheme comes to an end in April.

Stephen Joseph, a transport consultant and a visiting professor at Hertfordshire University, welcomed the £2 cap but warned that cuts in the bus network could undermine it. “The risk is that we’ll have cheap fares, but not enough buses for people to ride.”

The Department for Transport did not comment directly on the plans but said in a statement: “We’ve already committed to investing £3 billion in bus services by 2025, to improve fares, services and infrastructure, and given nearly £2 billion since March 2020 to bus operators and local authorities to mitigate the impacts of the pandemic.”

@NicholasHellen

 

PeterC

Established Member
Joined
29 Sep 2014
Messages
4,422
I suspect that the Treasury will kick back over a single subsidy for what are technically multiple journeys where long routes are split for registration.

IIRC this is the paper that told us that HS2 would be reservation only so I will wait and see if those £2 trips to Whitby materialise.
 

neilmc

Member
Joined
23 Oct 2011
Messages
1,061
Look forward to seeing a forum recommending how to split long bus journeys into £2 segments!
 

PeterC

Established Member
Joined
29 Sep 2014
Messages
4,422
Look forward to seeing a forum recommending how to split long bus journeys into £2 segments!
What is a journey? Why should I pay one price if the operator lets me stay on a vehicle that switches between two registered routes but pay twice as much if I have to continue in a different vehicle?
 

NorthOxonian

Established Member
Associate Staff
Buses & Coaches
Joined
5 Jul 2018
Messages
1,556
Location
Oxford/Newcastle
What is a journey? Why should I pay one price if the operator lets me stay on a vehicle that switches between two registered routes but pay twice as much if I have to continue in a different vehicle?
To make matters worse, there's at least one route I'm aware of that's registered as a through service but is operated by two vehicles (with a change required halfway through)! Would that require one single or two?
 

Busaholic

Veteran Member
Joined
7 Jun 2014
Messages
14,671
It is an ill-thought-through soundbite masquerading as a policy, with absolutely no detail as to how it's to be put into practice. Grant Shapps needs to focus on doing the job he's being paid fabulously for and stop crawling round with his tongue out in the vicinity of the PM's nether regions.
 

GusB

Established Member
Joined
9 Jul 2016
Messages
7,478
Location
Elginshire
Please remember that were discussing a £2 cap on fares. Anything else is off-topic.
 

Goldfish62

Veteran Member
Joined
14 Feb 2010
Messages
11,883
Given what's been happening in government since this was first mooted I assume it's dead in the water.
 

WatcherZero

Established Member
Joined
25 Feb 2010
Messages
10,272
How would any reimbursement scheme work for this? A £2 fare for a journey of 1 mile is not going to need the same support as £2 for 20 miles. By distance? Based on the current fare (which would disproportionately benefit operators perceived to offer poor value for money)? Get it wrong and a lot of routes are going to disappear (though that'll probably be the result anyway because the scheme will almost certainly be underfunded).

The other pitfall I can see is that the introduction of these "cheap" single fares will be used as an excuse either to withdraw or raise the price of period tickets, through which many regular users already pay less than £2 per journey.

Two ways of doing it really, either:
A. Government pays all Operator costs and keeps all the revenue (including bus passes and smaller tickets) as a subsidy deduction.
B. Government pays a flat mileage fee for every £2 journey e.g. 55p a mile. Passenger has to declare end point when they board, total passenger journey distance is worked out and subsidy paid with ticket revenue deducted.
 

johncrossley

Established Member
Joined
30 Mar 2021
Messages
3,548
Location
London
It would be impossible for the TfL to require you to rebook before the time limit because the Oyster reader doesn't allow the same card to be touched in twice on the same journey. So you would have to get off the bus before the hour (62 minutes including grace) is up, and then wait until 62 minutes have elapsed since the original boarding before boarding the next bus.
 

Bletchleyite

Veteran Member
Joined
20 Oct 2014
Messages
105,163
Location
"Marston Vale mafia"
Two ways of doing it really, either:
A. Government pays all Operator costs and keeps all the revenue (including bus passes and smaller tickets) as a subsidy deduction.
B. Government pays a flat mileage fee for every £2 journey e.g. 55p a mile. Passenger has to declare end point when they board, total passenger journey distance is worked out and subsidy paid with ticket revenue deducted.

I would have thought the most likely way is paying an increased figure for BSOG (Bus Service Operators' Grant, basically fuel duty rebate) as was done during COVID, as it doesn't require any extra reporting than is done already.
 

RT4038

Established Member
Joined
22 Feb 2014
Messages
4,882
I would have thought the most likely way is paying an increased figure for BSOG (Bus Service Operators' Grant, basically fuel duty rebate) as was done during COVID, as it doesn't require any extra reporting than is done already.
That isn't what was done during Covid.
 

Deerfold

Veteran Member
Joined
26 Nov 2009
Messages
13,172
Location
Yorkshire
It would be impossible for the TfL to require you to rebook before the time limit because the Oyster reader doesn't allow the same card to be touched in twice on the same journey. So you would have to get off the bus before the hour (62 minutes including grace) is up, and then wait until 62 minutes have elapsed since the original boarding before boarding the next bus.
What is this in response to?
 

neilmc

Member
Joined
23 Oct 2011
Messages
1,061
That's the opposite of what you'd want to do. Surely the aim would be to get as much distance as possible into a single £2 segment!

Well, if the intention is to let people make huge journeys (e.g. Leeds to Whitby for £2) fair enough, but I expect that operators of long inter-urban and rural services will kick back if like the ENCTS scheme they don't think they're been given adequate compensation.
 

Goldfish62

Veteran Member
Joined
14 Feb 2010
Messages
11,883
Cue HMG taking the opportunity to insist on fares in London increasing to £2 no doubt.
Given that over 50% of England bus journeys are in London how would the messaging come across on that?

"Great news! Fares reduced to £2, except for over half of you we're increasing them by over 20%."
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Top