Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Can anyone explain why, when using Oyster pay as you go, it costs 50p more to travel from Denmark Hill to Victoria than from Peckham Rye to Victoria? I only just noticed this when checking my journey history, and am somewhat puzzled since it?s exactly the same line, and I'd have thought that the journey from Denmark Hill should be cheaper since it?s a stop less.
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/20202-train-fare-anomaly/
Share on other sites

I found a corking pricing anomaly. I often travel to Bridgend, Wales. If I buy a super off-peak ticket at Paddington it costs ?69. If I buy it at ED station it is ?71, so a very reasonable ?2 to cross London both ways.


But, one day I needed to buy a single super off-peak from Bridgend back to ED - and they wanted a rather incredible ?71! How much to Paddington, I asked - it was ?40. So an amazing ?31 was being charged to cross London!!

Willma - I think you may be right. The DH journey was about 4.30pm. Definitely not the daily price cap, as the train journey was only the 2nd journey of the day (the bus to the respective stations being the first). I didn't know that there was a second peak time for fares. Not that it matters much, as the daily cap was still the off-peak one of ?6.60. I was just curious, so thank you for solving that mystery.


Loz - that probably has to go down as being one of the most overpriced train journeys in the country!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Good grief that could have been awful and lets hope no-one in the vehicle was injured either. Interesting use of "not operated by the council" in the councillor post. The council outsources collection doesn't it so doesn't actually operate any bin lorries any more? 
    • Crikey, that's bad. Yes, from the photo it looks like it skidded. A private operator apparently, so not Veolia. No information as to whether anybody was hurt, but unless there are mitigating circumstances (eg the driver suffered a sudden health incident or the brakes failed, though it shouldn't have been going fast enough to need the brakes at that point, surely) it looks like a prosecution for a driving offence is likely? Do vehicles like this have some kind of technology which retains the speed history etc?
    • PECKHAM PODCAST #12 If you know anyone with a child who has Long Covid then this story is for you. On PECKHAM PODCAST’s latest edition, Louise Dickinson tells her story of ‘daring to hope’. In 2020 she was happily working with young people in Camberwell at the Blue Elephant Theatre. Then she got Covid which turned into Long Covid. 5 years later she is Artistic Director of Alchemise Theatre, her own theatre company dedicated to children with Long Covid.
    • It’s good to see local councillors are taking this crash seriously, hopefully the police will also. The tyres marks left on the road suggest speed could have been a factor. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1FaPQjGu7x/?mibextid=wwXIfr
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...