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Rail fares for many north-south journeys have plummeted as an unintended consequence of a new ticket trial.
LNER, the government-run train operator on the East Coast main line, has introduced new, cheap off-peak tickets that require no advance booking.
At present they cover only tickets between London and three key cities: Leeds, Newcastle and Edinburgh.
But because of loopholes in the UK’s arcane rail fares system, millions of travellers on entirely different lines can benefit – whether they are travelling from Sheffield to St Albans or Carlisle to Coventry. No need to book ahead, “split tickets” or do anything dodgy – just ask for the right ticket.
The new fares even allow travellers on the West Coast main line legally to circumvent the usual peak restrictions – cutting the cost of a peak-time train from London Euston to Manchester by 58 per cent.
These are the key questions and answers.
Created with Sketch.
Created with Sketch.
1/50 3 January 2020
Protesters, holding a photograph of the leader of the People's Mujahedin of Iran Massoud Rajavi, outside Downing Street in London after the US killed General Qassem Soleimani in a drone strike at Baghdad's international airport. Soleimani was head of Tehran's elite Quds Force and Iran's top general
PA
2/50 2 January 2020
A keeper counts squirrel-monkeys at London Zoo during the annual stocktake. Caring for more than 500 different species, ZSL London Zoo's keepers face the challenging task of tallying up every mammal, bird, reptile, fish and invertebrate at the Zoo
AP
3/50 1 January 2020
Peter Wright celebrates winning with the Sid Waddell trophy at the Darts World Championships in London. He stunned Michael van Gerwen to clinch his first title 7-3
PA
4/50 31 December 2019
Surfers at Tynemouth on the north east coast
PA
5/50 30 December 2019
Deer graze in the morning mist as cyclists ride by in Richmond Park, London
Reuters
6/50 29 December 2019
Night sky after the sunset at Whitley Bay in Northumberland
PA
7/50 28 December 2019
The Harlequins players arrive at the stadium prior to the Gallagher Premiership Rugby Big Game 12 match between Harlequins and Leicester Tigers at Twickenahm Stadium
Getty Images for Harlequins
8/50 27 December 2019
A car drives through floodwater near Harbridge, north of Ringwood in Hampshire, after the river Avon burst its banks
PA
9/50 26 December 2019
Participants in the Old Surrey and West Kent Boxing Day Hunt in Chiddingstone. Hunting with horses and hounds is a Boxing Day tradition. Since the fox hunting ban in 2004, modified hunts take place using scented trails for the animals to follow
EPA
10/50 25 December 2019
Swimmers of the Serpentine Swimming Club take part in the Peter Pan Cup race, which is held every Christmas Day at the Serpentine, in central London
PA
11/50 24 December 2019
Shoppers bid for cuts of meat during a Christmas Eve auction in Smithfield market in London
EPA
12/50 23 December 2019
Reggie the dog is rescued with a boat from flooding at the Little Venice Country Park and Marina in Maidstone
AFP via Getty
13/50 22 December 2019
People gather at Stonehenge in Wiltshire to mark the winter solstice, and to witness the sunrise after the longest night of the year
PA
14/50 21 December 2019
Southampton's Jack Stephens scores their second goal against Aston Villa
Reuters
15/50 20 December 2019
The coffin arrives for the funeral of London Bridge terror attack victim Jack Merritt at Great St Mary's Church in Cambridge
PA
16/50 19 December 2019
Queen Elizabeth II and her son Prince Charles walk behind the Imperial State Crown as they proccess through the Royal Gallery, before the Queen's Speech, during the State Opening of Parliament
AFP via Getty
17/50 18 December 2019
Luke Jerram's art installation 'Gaia', a replica of planet earth created using detailed Nasa imagery of the Earth's surface, hangs on display at the Eden Project in St Austell, Cornwall
PA
18/50 17 December 2019
A surfer gets into the festive spirit at the inland surfing lagoon at The Wave, near Bristol
PA
19/50 16 December 2019
Snowy conditions near Deepdale in the Yorkshire Dales National Park as snow hits parts of the UK
PA
20/50 15 December 2019
Oisin Carson, 5, picks a Christmas tree at Wicklow Way Christmas tree farm in Roundwood
PA
21/50 14 December 2019
First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, takes a selfie as she joins the SNPs newly elected MPs for a group photo outside the V&A Museum in Dundee, Scotland
Getty Images
22/50 13 December 2019
Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds arrive back at Downing Street after the results for the general election were announced. The Conservative Party won with an overall majority
EPA
23/50 12 December 2019
A dog outside a polling station during the general election in Northumberland
Reuters
24/50 11 December 2019
Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson stands between a Stop Brexit sign as she attends a general election campaign event at Esher Rugby Club, south west London. Britain will go to the polls tomorrow to vote
AFP via Getty
25/50 10 December 2019
A surfer off the North East coast at Tynemouth
PA
26/50 9 December 2019
Leah Rossiter (left) and Ceara Carney, dressed as mermaids, join members of the Irish Wildlife Trust and Extinction Rebellion Ireland protesting outside Leinster House in Dublin, against overfishing in Irish Waters
PA
27/50 8 December 2019
Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn poses for selfies with supporters at a general election rally in Colwyn Bay, north Wales
AFP via Getty
28/50 7 December 2019
Speedo Mick outside the stadium before the Premier League match between Everton and Chelsea at Goodison Park
Action Images via Reuters
29/50 6 December 2019
A climate activist wearing a mask and holding a placard reading 'Fossil fuel era is over' outside Millbank Studios in London
AP
30/50 5 December 2019
SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon with the SNP campaign bus in front of the Queensferry Crossing, while on the General Election campaign trail in Scotland
PA
31/50 4 December 2019
The Christmas tree in Trafalgar Square, which is given every year by the city of Oslo as a token of Norwegian gratitude to the people of London for their assistance during the Second World War
PA
32/50 3 December 2019
Protesters against the visit of US President Trump during a demonstration near Buckingham Palace on the first day of the Nato Summit in London
EPA
33/50 2 December 2019
England captain Joe Root celebrates reaching his double century during day 4 of the second Test match against New Zealand at Seddon Park in Hamilton, New Zealand
Getty
34/50 1 December 2019
A hard frost is seen on the first day of the meteorological winter in Pitlochry, Scotland
Reuters
35/50 30 November 2019
A police officer looks at flowers left at London Bridge in central London, after a terrorist wearing a fake suicide vest who went on a knife rampage killing two people, and was shot dead by police
PA
36/50 29 November 2019
School children and students take part in the Youth Strike for Climate in London as part of the Fridays for Future Global Climate Strike
Angela Christofilou/The Independent
37/50 28 November 2019
Cyclists make their way up a tree lined hill near to Moor Crichel in Dorset. November's dismal weather will finally change, with drier and colder conditions coming for the start of December, forecasters have said
PA
38/50 27 November 2019
The moment a swan flew over a flock of 60,000 starlings as dusk fell on Whixall Moss Nature Reserve in Shropshire
Andrew Fusek Peters / SWNS
39/50 26 November 2019
SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon plays with local children during a visit to the Jelly Tots & Cookies Play Cafe in Uddingston, South Lanarkshire
PA
40/50 25 November 2019
Prime Minister Boris Johnson poses with sheep as he visits the Royal Welsh Showground, in Llanelwedd, Builth Wells, whilst on the General Election campaign trail
PA
41/50 24 November 2019
Cush Jumbo attends the 65th Evening Standard Theatre Awards at London Coliseum
Getty Images
42/50 23 November 2019
Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn meets a supporter on a train on his return from a visit to Sheffield
PA
43/50 22 November 2019
Gallery assistants adjust 'The Ancient Town of Uglich' by Konstantin Yuon, 1913, estimated at £600,000 to £800,000, during a press preview of the sale of works by some of the most pre-eminent creators of Russian art at Sotheby's in London
PA
44/50 21 November 2019
A mother seal appears to hug her pup as grey seals return to Donna Nook National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, where they come every year in late autumn and winter to give birth
PA
45/50 20 November 2019
After Mauricio Pochettino's sacking the eveninfg before newly appointed Tottenham head coach, Jose Mourinho, takes his first training session in charge
Tottenham Hotspur FC via Getty
46/50 19 November 2019
Prime Minister Boris Johnson during a visit to Jimmy Egan's Boxing Academy at Wythenshawe, while on the campaign trail ahead of the General Election
PA
47/50 18 November 2019
Mist over Buttermere lake in the Lake District
PA
48/50 17 November 2019
Stefanos Tsitsipas lifts the winners trophy after beating Dominic Thiem at the ATP World Tour Finals tennis tournament in London
EPA
49/50 16 November 2019
Duke of York, speaking for the first time about his links to Jeffrey Epstein in an interview with BBC Newsnight's Emily Maitlis
BBC/PA
50/50 15 November 2019
Brazilian indigenous leader, Kreta Kaingang from the Kaingang People, holds a petition letter with over 200,000 signatures asking the UK government to suspend trade talks with Brazil until the Amazon and its people are protected, as he poses outside 10 Downing Street
AFP via Getty
1/50 3 January 2020
Protesters, holding a photograph of the leader of the People's Mujahedin of Iran Massoud Rajavi, outside Downing Street in London after the US killed General Qassem Soleimani in a drone strike at Baghdad's international airport. Soleimani was head of Tehran's elite Quds Force and Iran's top general
PA
2/50 2 January 2020
A keeper counts squirrel-monkeys at London Zoo during the annual stocktake. Caring for more than 500 different species, ZSL London Zoo's keepers face the challenging task of tallying up every mammal, bird, reptile, fish and invertebrate at the Zoo
AP
3/50 1 January 2020
Peter Wright celebrates winning with the Sid Waddell trophy at the Darts World Championships in London. He stunned Michael van Gerwen to clinch his first title 7-3
PA
4/50 31 December 2019
Surfers at Tynemouth on the north east coast
PA
5/50 30 December 2019
Deer graze in the morning mist as cyclists ride by in Richmond Park, London
Reuters
6/50 29 December 2019
Night sky after the sunset at Whitley Bay in Northumberland
PA
7/50 28 December 2019
The Harlequins players arrive at the stadium prior to the Gallagher Premiership Rugby Big Game 12 match between Harlequins and Leicester Tigers at Twickenahm Stadium
Getty Images for Harlequins
8/50 27 December 2019
A car drives through floodwater near Harbridge, north of Ringwood in Hampshire, after the river Avon burst its banks
PA
9/50 26 December 2019
Participants in the Old Surrey and West Kent Boxing Day Hunt in Chiddingstone. Hunting with horses and hounds is a Boxing Day tradition. Since the fox hunting ban in 2004, modified hunts take place using scented trails for the animals to follow
EPA
10/50 25 December 2019
Swimmers of the Serpentine Swimming Club take part in the Peter Pan Cup race, which is held every Christmas Day at the Serpentine, in central London
PA
11/50 24 December 2019
Shoppers bid for cuts of meat during a Christmas Eve auction in Smithfield market in London
EPA
12/50 23 December 2019
Reggie the dog is rescued with a boat from flooding at the Little Venice Country Park and Marina in Maidstone
AFP via Getty
13/50 22 December 2019
People gather at Stonehenge in Wiltshire to mark the winter solstice, and to witness the sunrise after the longest night of the year
PA
14/50 21 December 2019
Southampton's Jack Stephens scores their second goal against Aston Villa
Reuters
15/50 20 December 2019
The coffin arrives for the funeral of London Bridge terror attack victim Jack Merritt at Great St Mary's Church in Cambridge
PA
16/50 19 December 2019
Queen Elizabeth II and her son Prince Charles walk behind the Imperial State Crown as they proccess through the Royal Gallery, before the Queen's Speech, during the State Opening of Parliament
AFP via Getty
17/50 18 December 2019
Luke Jerram's art installation 'Gaia', a replica of planet earth created using detailed Nasa imagery of the Earth's surface, hangs on display at the Eden Project in St Austell, Cornwall
PA
18/50 17 December 2019
A surfer gets into the festive spirit at the inland surfing lagoon at The Wave, near Bristol
PA
19/50 16 December 2019
Snowy conditions near Deepdale in the Yorkshire Dales National Park as snow hits parts of the UK
PA
20/50 15 December 2019
Oisin Carson, 5, picks a Christmas tree at Wicklow Way Christmas tree farm in Roundwood
PA
21/50 14 December 2019
First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, takes a selfie as she joins the SNPs newly elected MPs for a group photo outside the V&A Museum in Dundee, Scotland
Getty Images
22/50 13 December 2019
Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds arrive back at Downing Street after the results for the general election were announced. The Conservative Party won with an overall majority
EPA
23/50 12 December 2019
A dog outside a polling station during the general election in Northumberland
Reuters
24/50 11 December 2019
Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson stands between a Stop Brexit sign as she attends a general election campaign event at Esher Rugby Club, south west London. Britain will go to the polls tomorrow to vote
AFP via Getty
25/50 10 December 2019
A surfer off the North East coast at Tynemouth
PA
26/50 9 December 2019
Leah Rossiter (left) and Ceara Carney, dressed as mermaids, join members of the Irish Wildlife Trust and Extinction Rebellion Ireland protesting outside Leinster House in Dublin, against overfishing in Irish Waters
PA
27/50 8 December 2019
Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn poses for selfies with supporters at a general election rally in Colwyn Bay, north Wales
AFP via Getty
28/50 7 December 2019
Speedo Mick outside the stadium before the Premier League match between Everton and Chelsea at Goodison Park
Action Images via Reuters
29/50 6 December 2019
A climate activist wearing a mask and holding a placard reading 'Fossil fuel era is over' outside Millbank Studios in London
AP
30/50 5 December 2019
SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon with the SNP campaign bus in front of the Queensferry Crossing, while on the General Election campaign trail in Scotland
PA
31/50 4 December 2019
The Christmas tree in Trafalgar Square, which is given every year by the city of Oslo as a token of Norwegian gratitude to the people of London for their assistance during the Second World War
PA
32/50 3 December 2019
Protesters against the visit of US President Trump during a demonstration near Buckingham Palace on the first day of the Nato Summit in London
EPA
33/50 2 December 2019
England captain Joe Root celebrates reaching his double century during day 4 of the second Test match against New Zealand at Seddon Park in Hamilton, New Zealand
Getty
34/50 1 December 2019
A hard frost is seen on the first day of the meteorological winter in Pitlochry, Scotland
Reuters
35/50 30 November 2019
A police officer looks at flowers left at London Bridge in central London, after a terrorist wearing a fake suicide vest who went on a knife rampage killing two people, and was shot dead by police
PA
36/50 29 November 2019
School children and students take part in the Youth Strike for Climate in London as part of the Fridays for Future Global Climate Strike
Angela Christofilou/The Independent
37/50 28 November 2019
Cyclists make their way up a tree lined hill near to Moor Crichel in Dorset. November's dismal weather will finally change, with drier and colder conditions coming for the start of December, forecasters have said
PA
38/50 27 November 2019
The moment a swan flew over a flock of 60,000 starlings as dusk fell on Whixall Moss Nature Reserve in Shropshire
Andrew Fusek Peters / SWNS
39/50 26 November 2019
SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon plays with local children during a visit to the Jelly Tots & Cookies Play Cafe in Uddingston, South Lanarkshire
PA
40/50 25 November 2019
Prime Minister Boris Johnson poses with sheep as he visits the Royal Welsh Showground, in Llanelwedd, Builth Wells, whilst on the General Election campaign trail
PA
41/50 24 November 2019
Cush Jumbo attends the 65th Evening Standard Theatre Awards at London Coliseum
Getty Images
42/50 23 November 2019
Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn meets a supporter on a train on his return from a visit to Sheffield
PA
43/50 22 November 2019
Gallery assistants adjust 'The Ancient Town of Uglich' by Konstantin Yuon, 1913, estimated at £600,000 to £800,000, during a press preview of the sale of works by some of the most pre-eminent creators of Russian art at Sotheby's in London
PA
44/50 21 November 2019
A mother seal appears to hug her pup as grey seals return to Donna Nook National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, where they come every year in late autumn and winter to give birth
PA
45/50 20 November 2019
After Mauricio Pochettino's sacking the eveninfg before newly appointed Tottenham head coach, Jose Mourinho, takes his first training session in charge
Tottenham Hotspur FC via Getty
46/50 19 November 2019
Prime Minister Boris Johnson during a visit to Jimmy Egan's Boxing Academy at Wythenshawe, while on the campaign trail ahead of the General Election
PA
47/50 18 November 2019
Mist over Buttermere lake in the Lake District
PA
48/50 17 November 2019
Stefanos Tsitsipas lifts the winners trophy after beating Dominic Thiem at the ATP World Tour Finals tennis tournament in London
EPA
49/50 16 November 2019
Duke of York, speaking for the first time about his links to Jeffrey Epstein in an interview with BBC Newsnight's Emily Maitlis
BBC/PA
50/50 15 November 2019
Brazilian indigenous leader, Kreta Kaingang from the Kaingang People, holds a petition letter with over 200,000 signatures asking the UK government to suspend trade talks with Brazil until the Amazon and its people are protected, as he poses outside 10 Downing Street
AFP via Getty
What has changed?
At the time of rail privatisation in the mid-1990s, John Major’s government sought to protect train travellers from excessive fare rises by imposing a host of rules and requirements.
As a result there are countless anomalies “baked in” to the pricing system. The rail industry has long espoused the wish to move to “single-leg pricing,” as practised by budget airlines: every journey has its own price, independent of any other elements.
At last a serious trial is taking place between London King’s Cross and the three key stations on the East Coast main line: Leeds, Newcastle and Edinburgh.
From 2 January, a raft of complexity has been swept away. The only tickets on offer between London and these cities are singles, in three flavours: Anytime, Advance and Super Off Peak. (No one has been able to tell me why the word “Super” precedes Off Peak, but never mind that.)
You already know about Anytime (let’s call them Super Expensive but completely flexible) and Advance, which are always one-way tickets. The new and exciting aspect is the ability, outside peak hours, to walk up to a ticket desk or machine and buy a good-value one-way fare.
An off-peak single to or from Leeds now costs £58.35; Newcastle, £72.85; and Edinburgh, £75.75. These fares, which came in on 2 January 2020, are almost 48 per cent lower than they were on New Year’s Day. Collectively, I call them “East Coast cheapies”.
Crucially, they are “walk-up” fares that require no advance booking and are not capacity-restricted.
That’s great for those cities – but I’m travelling elsewhere.
As long as you are making a long-distance rail journey taking in at least two of southern England, the Midlands, northern England and southern Scotland, and you need a flexible ticket, then there is a very good chance you will be able to save money with an East Coast cheapie.
The most obvious savings are on the East Coast main line, linking London King’s Cross with Yorkshire, Tyneside and Edinburgh. Almost any journey involving an off-peak, one-way ticket will be made cheaper if you go for. From Wakefield, Doncaster or Retford to London, buy the Leeds-King’s Cross ticket. From York, Darlington and Durham, you’ll need the Newcastle East Coast cheapie; and from Alnmouth, Berwick and Dunbar, it’s the Edinburgh ticket.
The same principle applies for every single station on the East Coast main line, from Finsbury Park (the first stop north of King’s Cross) to Mussleburgh (the last station before Edinburgh). You can change trains as many times as you like, and use any train operator on the line – including Great Northern, Thameslink, Grand Central, Hull Trains, CrossCountry and ScotRail, as well as LNER itself. And, subject to the off-peak restrictions, you can build in some stops to your journey – for example pausing for lunch in York and tea in Northumberland on your way from London to Edinburgh.
So I can use the ticket on other train firms – what about other lines?
Yes. Remarkably, LNER and the Department for Transport (DfT) have not chosen to impose any routing restrictions on the trial tickets. You might have expected them to specify “East Coast main line only”, but instead your ticket will say: “Route – any permitted”. This generosity opens up a cornucopia of possibilities, but the key benefits are on two train operators: East Midlands Railway from Sheffield, Derby, Nottingham and Leicester to London St Pancras, and Avanti West Coast from southern Scotland, northwest England and the West Midlands to London Euston.
On the East Midlands line, any one-way off-peak journey from Leicester and stations north of London will be at least £10 cheaper if you buy the Leeds-London East Coast cheapie. On many intermediate journeys – for example between Chesterfield and Luton – it will also prove the best deal. Any portions of these journeys covered by Thameslink and CrossCountry are also fine.
On the West Coast main line, any journey between stations from London Euston to Carstairs in Scotland is covered by the London-Edinburgh East Coast cheapie.
Crucially, this offers the biggest savings of all – because it removes the normal evening peak restrictions from London Euston to Stockport, Manchester, Warrington, Wigan or Preston.
So if you buy a ticket from London to Edinburgh using the 6pm from Euston to Manchester Piccadilly, and a notional connection from there to the Scottish capital on TransPennine Express, there is no problem using it to circumvent the normal £180 one-way fare to Manchester – saving 58 per cent.
How do I book an East Coast cheapie?
Just as you would any other ticket – go to a station booking office, buy online or via an app, or book by phone. You must buy a ticket for the journey you are using as “cover”, ie between London and Leeds, Newcastle or Edinburgh, rather than the journey you intend to make.
There is no need to cite a specific train or get a seat reservation, but you can if you wish.
I’m concerned about the off-peak restrictions – what are they?
The strongest restrictions are for journeys on the line to and from Leeds. On a weekday, the earliest you can arrive in London is 11.31am – whether you start in Leeds itself, Wakefield or Doncaster. That is the only southbound restriction.
Heading north, there are annoyingly two blackout spells. You cannot travel on trains timed to leave London before 9.06am, nor between 3pm and 6.59pm. It’s important to note that the London time is crucial; you might board a Peterborough-Leeds train after 7pm, but what is relevant is the time it left King’s Cross.
Other London terminal stations have slightly different timings, and the foolproof way to ensure you can travel is to use the National Rail Enquiries website. If it quotes the “East Coast cheapie” for the notional journey, eg London to Edinburgh via Manchester, then you can use it.
If you have plenty of time on your hands, you can identify the restriction code for your proposed journey (which will look something like 1K or 9D) and enjoy exploring all the permutations. Or you might instead want to get out more.
Can I use my railcard?
Yes, subject to the card’s usual time restrictions, as well as the off-peak criteria. The strictest rules prevail – so even if a journey is permitted by your railcard, if the fare conditions for your trip rule it out, you can’t use an East Coast cheapie.
Has this got anything to do with “split tickets”?
No, they require none of the usual kerfuffle involving buying multiple tickets to exploit anomalies in the fares system. But for destinations beyond Leeds, Newcastle and Edinburgh you can certainly use split tickets to reduce the cost of the trip.
The profits from legally “splitting tickets” are immense: the walk-up fare on the 10am from London to Aberdeen will cost £178.40 if you ask for a through ticket, but almost £50 less if you buy one to Edinburgh and another from there. No need to leave the train, either.
The new system will incentivise apparently irrational journeys, too. Rather than catch a CrossCountry through train from Bristol to Leeds, the impetuous but impecunious traveller should head first for Reading on GWR (for which a separate ticket is needed) and change for Birmingham and again for Leeds.