Sunderland Echo

Get tracking a railway deal

- MARTIN LEWIS

The only way to find the cheapest rail ticket is to throw all logic out of the window. Ask at a station or online, “What’s the cheapest train ticket from Pennyhill to Walletswor­th?” And sadly you can’t rely on the answer. In many cases there are far cheaper options than the answer given.

Things are improving a touch. Some train firms have recently announced simplifica­tion trials from May so you don’t pay more for travelling ‘any permitted route’ and ‘airline-style’ mix-and-match ticketing, so if you change trains and see that the price of two journeys is cheaper than one, it’ll show you that.

Yet even this won’t guarantee when you book a ticket, you’ll get the cheapest price. Soherearem­ykeytipsto­keep ticket costs on the rails… 1. TRY SPLITTING YOUR TICKETS

(it won’t be shown even under the new system)

Split-ticketing is where instead of buying one ticket for the journey, you buy multiple tickets for different parts of the same journey, which perversely, illogicall­y and ridiculous­ly often works out cheaper.

The exact journey routes vary train by train and by journey, so it isn’t always consistent. The best example I’ve ever seen was London to Penzance when an anytime day return cost £250. Yet the train stops at Plymouth, so buy London to Plymouth, Plymouth to Penzance and the same for the return journey and the total was just £50. So it’s the same train, same time, even the same seat, just £200 cheaper.

2. BOOK 12 WEEKS EARLY FOR CHEAPER FARES

Most people know if you book early you’ll get cheaper train tickets. But the key time to look is 12 weeks before you want to travel, as that’s when the timetable is set so most operators start to launch their advance tickets then – meaning you get the best availabili­ty on cheap fares.

3. GET A (DISCOUNTED) RAILCARD

Annual national railcards usually reduce the bill by a third, so as they normally cost £30, if you’re spending over £90, even on a one-off trip it’s worth it. The main cards are…

Family & Friends Railcard. You and up to three other adults (two can be named on the card) get a third off the fare, providing you’re travelling with between one and four kids, who get 60% off.

2TogetherR­ailcard. This works for two people providing they’re travelling together and both named (and photograph­ed) on the card.

Senior Railcard. This gets over 60’s a third off the fare.

16-25 Railcard. Gives a third off fares travelling at any time.

Disabled persons railcard. Gives a third off for you and an adult companion, any time any day.

Network Railcard. This is for those living in southern England as it covers journeys in the Network Railcard area. Up to three adults can travel with you and get a third off and up to four children get 60% off.

4. GET EARLY BOOKING DISCOUNTS – LATE

There’s generally a certain number of advance tickets available for each journey. Don’t assume you can’t get these if you’re travelling tomorrow, always check. If they’re still available most train firms let you book them up to 6pm or 11.59pm the day before travel, and CrossCount­ry trains until 15 minutes before the train leaves.

5. TRAIN DELAYED, GET YOUR MONEY BACK

Usually if you’re delayed over 30 minutes (it varies by firm) most companies operate a ‘Delay Repay scheme’, which if you ask pays out at least 50% of the fare regardless of whether the delay was its fault or not (though some now pay 25% for 15 minute delays). You can get this as cash or cheque, not just in rail vouchers as it used to be.

If you’ve a season ticket, again it depends on the firm, you can sometimes claim per delay, for a cluster of delays, or not at all.

6. PAID FOR YOUR SEASON TICKET

(or even part of it) on a credit card, you could get compensati­on

Recently American Express refunded one traveller half the cost of his Southern Rail season ticket back (around £2,400), due to the fact that 50% of his journeys had been delayed or cancelled.

This is all due to Section 75 rules, which mean if you pay or part-pay for something on a credit card for something that costs between £100-£30,000, even if it was just a penny, then the credit card company is JOINTLY liable along with retailers (so in this case Southern Rail) for making sure customers receive the goods or services they paid for.

If you’ve had continual bad delays with your season ticket, this can be more lucrative than complainin­g to the train firm (but less guaranteed) more help and templates at www. mse.me/section75.

Martin Lewis is the Founder and Chair of MoneySavin­gExpert.com. To join the 12 million people who get his free Money Tips weekly email, go to www. moneysavin­gexpert.com/latesttip.

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