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Buying Train Tickets online
I'm looking at Trainline.com to buy train tickets through. My journey will take me via 3 different rail operators but on the journey details it states 'This ticket is only valid for travel on Virgin Trains West Coast services and connections'
This confuses me - I was hoping the price quoted would cover the whole journey but reading this kind of suggests it doesnt?
This confuses me - I was hoping the price quoted would cover the whole journey but reading this kind of suggests it doesnt?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Booldawg. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You could try here.. just seen an advert for them and it looks quite straight forward... (however, looks can be decieving I suppose!)..
http://www.redspotted...red%20spotted%20hanky
http://www.redspotted...red%20spotted%20hanky
You will get the same deal on fares at a rail operator's site as you will at thetrainline - but you will avoid whatever booking fees, etc, the trainline is charging these days
Red Spotted Hanky is a decent site that charges no fees.
The 'and connections' bit allows you to travel on other trains to connect into and out of the Virgin one. It also includes the underground from Waterloo to Euston.
Red Spotted Hanky is a decent site that charges no fees.
The 'and connections' bit allows you to travel on other trains to connect into and out of the Virgin one. It also includes the underground from Waterloo to Euston.
Are you near a local manned train station or booking office. The one near me is brilliant, they can be very helpful. I have also, when away from home, gone to the local booking office armed with details from the web and shown them to them, they can usually match prices and you don't have to worry about postage or surcharges.
They depend on the business to survive.
They depend on the business to survive.
not sure how it works booldawg - east coast rail sent out our tickets and we were on the virgin service home. was easy peasy but not sure how it works. I use d the find the cheapest journey tool on the national rail website. you have to do each journey as a single, but you can compare all the operator and work out the cheapest train to get.
For a lengthy explanation google ORCATS and then wish you hadn't
More simply, the outfit that sells you the ticket gets a commission
then the fare money is divvied up between the companies that operate on your route according to a complicated formula based roughly on the train mileage they run on that route. For advance tickets which are for fixed trains only the company operating the service gets all the fare
A few companies will offer you a discount on the published fare if you use their own trains only and book with them - they don't have to pay commission to another company
More simply, the outfit that sells you the ticket gets a commission
then the fare money is divvied up between the companies that operate on your route according to a complicated formula based roughly on the train mileage they run on that route. For advance tickets which are for fixed trains only the company operating the service gets all the fare
A few companies will offer you a discount on the published fare if you use their own trains only and book with them - they don't have to pay commission to another company