Was just looking at a journey and see it for much cheaper on RedSpottedHanky than on Trainline and even National Rail directly.
I know that there are 'buckets' or something for different fare points, and when they sell out, the price moves up to the next price point. However, I thought all of the resellers pulled from the same buckets. Is this not the case? Does RSH get an allocation of tickets from one bucket, and are allowed to sell them at the lower price even after National Rail sells out of that level?
Perhaps it's nothing to do with the buckets at all, but I thought that typically they were all always the same price.
This particular journey is:
FROM: Fareham [FRM]
TO: Nottingham [NOT]
ON: July 25th 11:28
WITH: 16-25 Railcard
Journey returned:
Fareham [FRM] -> Winchester [WIN] 11:55
Winchester [WIN] -> Derby [DBY] 15:06
Derby [DBY] -> Nottingham [NOT] 15:41
One-way
Results:
National Rail: £48.30
Trainline: £48.30
RedspottedHanky: £30.05
Am I missing something about why RedSpottedHanky is offering this for cheaper than others?
I know that there are 'buckets' or something for different fare points, and when they sell out, the price moves up to the next price point. However, I thought all of the resellers pulled from the same buckets. Is this not the case? Does RSH get an allocation of tickets from one bucket, and are allowed to sell them at the lower price even after National Rail sells out of that level?
Perhaps it's nothing to do with the buckets at all, but I thought that typically they were all always the same price.
This particular journey is:
FROM: Fareham [FRM]
TO: Nottingham [NOT]
ON: July 25th 11:28
WITH: 16-25 Railcard
Journey returned:
Fareham [FRM] -> Winchester [WIN] 11:55
Winchester [WIN] -> Derby [DBY] 15:06
Derby [DBY] -> Nottingham [NOT] 15:41
One-way
Results:
National Rail: £48.30
Trainline: £48.30
RedspottedHanky: £30.05
Am I missing something about why RedSpottedHanky is offering this for cheaper than others?