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#1
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Question: I have a Network Railcard, if I am buying a ticket for myself and
also for an "accompanying passenger", must the accompanying passenger be on the same exact journey as me (the network card holder)? (N.B. I will be with the "accompanying passenger" for the entirety of their journey, but the "accompanying passenger" will not be with me for the entirety of my journey). For clarification I am journeying from SW London via Tottenham Hale to Stansted Airport - I will buy my ticket using network railcard (SW Trains to Vauxhall and then the Victoria Line to Tottenham Hale for Stansted Express to Stansted Airport) - a friend then joins me at Tottenham Hale to Stansted. I ask the question as a year or so ago on making similar journey I asked to buy two tickets from Tottenham Hale and said I would then make my own way to Tottenham Hale by LU. The helpful staff at the "travel centre" in the local SW Trains station initiated and suggested (i.e at that time I did not consider it would be possible) to me that I should buy my own ticket starting in SW London and that I could buy the accompanying passenger ticket starting from Tottenham Hale. I responded that I was surprised I could do that and they stated that as the "accompanying passenger" was always with me for the entirety of the "accompanying passenger's journey" this met the terms and conditions of the Network Railcard. This was not a one-off as I purchased similar ticket's using my Network Railcard on going to Brighton and similar, e.g. I would buy a ticket from SW London via Clapham Junction to Brighton and I would buy an "accompanying passenger" ticket from Clapham Junction (the accompanying passenger making his own way to Clapham Junction) to Brighton. On today trying to make a similar purchase (to Stansted) I have now been told that the "accompanying passenger" ticket has to be for the exact same journey. I asked had the terms and conditions of the Network Railcard changed, I was told they had not and that the previous tickets must have been sold to me in error. |
#2
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#3
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In article ,
(Colin Rosenstiel) wrote: One point where people don't travel together was on one day travelcards to London. I was told my daughter could travel on the tube while I was not with her as long as we travelled out and back on the train together. Used to do that with my mother as well... -- Paul Cummins **FREE** mobile phones, with FREE line rental http://www.gstgroup.co.uk/ |
#4
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![]() PHH699 wrote: must the accompanying passenger be on the same exact journey as me (the network card holder)? (N.B. I will be with the "accompanying passenger" for the entirety of their journey, but the "accompanying passenger" will not be with me for the entirety of my journey). That's fine. As long as both parties are travelling with the railcard, then you'll be fine. If your second ticketholder were stopped whilst alone, they would not be able to produce the railcard, and therefore would not have a valid ticket. Of you then head home alone, you would have a valid ticket, backed up by the railcard. |
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