South East London hit with higher fares: fare gap widening even further

You may have noticed that next year’s rail increases were recently announced. Increases of 3.4% are to be implemented on regulated fares such as season tickets. Oyster fares will rise by even higher amounts for some – as has been the norm for years. Rises of up to 5-10% have been occurring on some routes with little comment for some time.

Many decried the train companies when rises are announced though it’s central government and the Department for Transport that sets the majority of fares, like so much else on the railway network.

Take this to Cannon Street and you pay more than a DLR to Bank from the same station

Let’s take a look at what the cost increases will be for an Oyster Pay As You Go fare from Zone 4 to Zone 1. See which are the more expensive and do not allow free transfer to the tube. You can probably guess.

DLR: Woolwich Arsenal (Zone 4) to Bank (Zone 1) £3.90 peak or £2.80 off-peak. No additional fee to transfer to the tube.

Southeastern: Woolwich Arsenal to Cannon Street £4.10 peak or £3.00 off-peak. Extra £1.70 to transfer to tube so a single trip with one change to the tube will cost £5.80 at peak times.

Tube: £3.90 peak or £2.80 off-peak. Changes to other tube lines included without fees of course.

C2C: £3.90 peak or £2.80 off-peak. Free tube transfer.

Great Western: Southall (Zone 4) to London Paddington (Zone 1) £3.90 peak or £2.80 off-peak. Free tube transfer.

Southern: Penge West (Z4) to London Bridge(Z1) – £3.90 or £2.80. Free tube transfer

South West Rail: New Malden (Zone 4) to Waterloo (Zone 1) £4.10 peak or £3 off-peak. No free tube transfer. Higher SE level fares.

London Overground/TfL Rail: Same as most of London. £3.90 peak or £2.80 off-peak. No extra fees for changing.

What we see is franchises that aren’t on the TfL fare scale have rises whilst TfL fares, and those of privatised franchises that adopt the same fare scale, are frozen hence the price difference in London increases. It appears this will continue for years to come.

South West Trains and Southeastern have the most expensive fares. SWT passengers can at least point to trains that are cleaner and better maintained plus staffed compared to Southeastern Metro.

Southeastern fares could change if the DfT stipulate in the new franchise that they align with TfL levels as happens in West London with Great Western Rail and East London with c2c, to give two examples. They show no sign of doing this.

And local authorities in South East London show no sign of even being aware of the wide fare disparity that is set to continue widening in future years. As shown above, a Southeastern train trip with a change to the tube during the morning peak with be £5.80 after another rise. Live in west London and it’s £3.90 for a similar trip.

Like other issues with the future franchise such as station staffing, most South East London politicians have been distracted by other issues and not said a thing for fare parity, let alone included it in franchise responses. You’d expect those in charge of transport in borough’s like Greenwich to highlight this and fight to end it, but no such luck.

 

 

------------------

Adverts are far from enough to cover site costs and my rent.

You can support me via Paypal here

Another option is via Patreon by clicking here

You can also buy me a beer/coffee at Ko-fi here

There's also a Facebook page for the site here

Many thanks

J Smith

I've lived in south east London most of my life growing up in Greenwich borough and working in the area for many years. The site has contributors on occasion and we cover many different topics. Living and working in the area offers an insight into what is happening locally.

6 thoughts on “South East London hit with higher fares: fare gap widening even further

  • Ridiculous but doesn’t matter if you just buy travelcard right, e.g. zone1-3 would come to about £7 return (assuming 20 days /month)

    Reply
    • It does if part time or say, visiting hospitals in London. Many instances where people have to pay more

      Reply
  • Pingback: The continuing decline of Southeastern trains – FromTheMurkyDepths

  • Just going to log onto twitter to see what local mp pennycook is making of all of this, Oh look at that. No mention.

    Reply
  • Does this become more interesting now that Thameslink trains begin?

    For example, take a journey from Greenwich to Moorgate. Currently the only way to do without touching at any intermediate stations is on the DLR to Bank, then Northern Line (£2.90 peak). Going via London Bridge will cost you £4.50, and the system will know to charge you this as you must tap out at London Bridge, and tap in again at the tube station.

    From May, you could take the Thameslink (or even Southeastern to London Bridge and then Thameslink) to Farringdon, and take the tube to Moorgate. The NR and tube are all within the same gateline at Farringdon, so the system has no idea if you went via London Bridge on National Rail or via Bank on DLR. Surely it must charge you £2.90, even if you went via London Bridge and National Rail?

    The same logic applies with any Z1 tube station. Does this mean that travelling on National Rail is going to get cheaper on those routes with changes at Farringdon?

    Reply
    • I recently covered this as some in the industry believe fares could jump to bring a fare windfall to the DfT, and it could be part of Graylings hopes to bring down TfL

      Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.