overthewater
Established Member
- Joined
- 16 Apr 2012
- Messages
- 8,411
Did Anyone else see this blog? and how we only have the highest fares for about 15% of the tickets sold?
Mark Smith said:There's been lots of fuss in the papers about the UK having higher rail fares than Europe. So much so, I decided to do a test myself.
Long-distance inter-city or short-distance commuter?
First, I believe that any sensible discussion of fares must be clearly divided into long distance or short distance/commuter, as the issues are totally different. It makes no more sense to discuss rail fares all in one go than to discuss 'bus fares' without saying whether you mean National Express Victoria coach station to Leeds, or the number 13 from Baker Street to Oxford Circus. Commuter/short distance fares are largely subsidized, and broadly-speaking it's a political choice between higher taxation, higher subsidy, lower fares, and lower taxation, lower subsidy and higher fares, which we Brits have tended to make lower down the tax/subsidy range and higher up the fare price range than other countries, for better or for worse. But here, I'll look at long distance fares.
The test... The results even surprised me...
I picked four fairly-similar routes: London to Sheffield 265Km, Paris to Dijon 287Km, Rome to Florence 261Km, Nuremberg to Kassel 265Km. Actually, I didn't pick the first three, a journalist who contacted me had already identified these as comparable, so I simply re-used them, no pre-selecting particularly-cheap UK routes or particularly-expensive Continental routes on my part. The fourth route was simply the first inter-city German route of about 265Km I came across flicking through the German part of the Thomas Cook European Timetable. So, nothing up my sleeve, no funny business in the choice of routes, I was doing this for my benefit as much as public consumption. I then simply used www.nationalrail.co.uk for UK prices, www.tgv-europe.com for French prices, www.trenitalia.com for Italian prices and www.bahn.de for German prices. All very simple to do.
1. Booking a month in advance...
OK, so first test. We try booking a train at midday, exactly one month ahead
rest here: http://www.seat61.com/uk-europe-train-fares-comparison.html#.UOc7vG82ZZo
.
Last edited: