They can be bought on some other websites but you may only be able to buy tickets for the seats. You aren't going to be able to reduce the price by splitting the fare because a given berth can only be used once and there are very few stations at which the sleeper sets down and picks up.Is it possible to buy caledonian sleeper tickets on any mainstream ticket site or on split ticket sites?
Possibly, but I don't think you are going to find that approach is cheaper.Would it be possible to use split tickets for the fare and buy a sleeper supplement for the whole journey covered by the split tickets?
What sort of combination did you have in mind?Is it possible to buy caledonian sleeper tickets on any mainstream ticket site or on split ticket sites?
Would it be possible to use split tickets for the fare and buy a sleeper supplement for the whole journey covered by the split tickets?
You can buy seats for the Caledonian Sleeper on most websites. Berths are generally only available through the CS website.Is it possible to buy caledonian sleeper tickets on any mainstream ticket site or on split ticket sites?
Would it be possible to use split tickets for the fare and buy a sleeper supplement for the whole journey covered by the split tickets?
Is it possible to buy caledonian sleeper tickets on any mainstream ticket site or on split ticket sites?
Would it be possible to use split tickets for the fare and buy a sleeper supplement for the whole journey covered by the split tickets?
The calls on the Fort William portion from Dalmuir westwards are 'open', similarly the Inverness portion is 'open' from Kingussie northwards.All other relevant splits require the train to stop at the boundary station for both joining and alighting, and that I recall all intermediate stops on CS are for either boarding or alighting, none permit both.
The calls on the Fort William portion from Dalmuir westwards are 'open', similarly the Inverness portion is 'open' from Kingussie northwards.
A random selection gives the supplement at £130 for a room that is £250 inclusive, with £120 to play with there is some scope for savings, particularly if you are travelling further or wanting to return on daytime trains with flexible tickets.
An Off Peak Return from Euston to Glasgow is £160.90, so I'm not sure you would do much to improve on that. Long distance Off Peak Returns on the WCML are generally very well priced for historic reasons. I don't think I've ever found a walk-up split that saved money against one.
You'd save with Advances, of course, but in that case you'd also want a Sleeper Advance.
Euston-Fort Bill SVR is £192.80, and Glasgow-Fort Bill £55.10, so that split isn't worth it (and wouldn't be valid as the Glasgow stop is pick up only).
Most walk-up splits only save you money if you're stringing together Off Peak Day Returns (no use for a trip this long) or taking a specifically cheaper route or TOC. There are very few where you save by splitting Any Permitted Off Peak Returns, certainly on the WCML I've never found one.
The most expensive berth-inclusive fare for the Classic rooms is £270. So yes, if that's the only fare that is available (which is pretty unlikely - I'm not sure they ever sell that tier) then it would be cheaper to use a walk-up ticket and add on a supplement. But it still wouldn't be any cheaper to buy split tickets, as suggested in the original post.You would still save by using the supplement + cheapest walk-up in some circumstances.
Also the berth inclusive fares have variable rates while the supplements seem to be fairly fixed so it's worthwhile looking at combining particularly when the inclusive fare is high.