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A combination of advance and split tickets can work. Try a few combinations of stop off points to see if breaking a journey without necessarily getting off the train can save ££
Traffic congestion, ULEZ and parking need to be considered though.Assuming you have a licence then drive.
Will save you a world of stress and aggravation not having to worry about whether the train is going to be delayed/cancelled yet again, not to mention the money on replacement buses & taxis on top of the season ticket you're already paying for for a train which you get to use half the time at best.
Traffic congestion, ULEZ and parking need to be considered though.
Rail replacement busses are free with your ticket, the train is really not that bad. Less stress than driving into London something I wouldn't even entertain these days.
No, if you have a valid train ticket but they are needing to put on a bus replacement then you can use that at no extra cost, its the same anywhere in the country.That must be a London thing? Certainly isn't the case round here!
No, if you have a valid train ticket but they are needing to put on a bus replacement then you can use that at no extra cost, its the same anywhere in the country.
Rail Replacement Services | National Rail
If there are planned engineering works or an unplanned disruption, we might need to run rail replacement services instead of your train. This could be a bus, coach, wheelchair accessible taxi, saloon car taxi or wheelchair accessible minibus.www.nationalrail.co.uk
Even the very worst of statistics don't paint that picture.Ah yes, official rail replacement services actually arranged by the rail provider then of course.
The far more likely 2-3 times a week "We couldn't be bothered to run the train today, so you'll have to find your own way to work" "replacement" buses on the other hand...
Even the very worst of statistics don't paint that picture.
Milford on Sea?
Oh thank god mate. You just dodged a bullet, that train station fiasco would have done your head in.
Assuming you have a licence then drive.
Will save you a world of stress and aggravation not having to worry about whether the train is going to be delayed/cancelled yet again, not to mention the money on replacement buses & taxis on top of the season ticket you're already paying for for a train which you get to use half the time at best.
My main advice:
- If you are travelling infrequently, season tickets are not good value. I travel 1-2 days per week and do not buy one any more. Even the "flexitickets" that offer 8 journeys per 28 days are not good value.
- Day returns to London are more expensive than two singles for me, because the return journey is off peak
- Get a cheap network railcard (trip.com often have offers) and you can use this for cheaper travel in the evening. Pays for itself in a couple of journeys.
- If you know in advance when you need to travel, consider advance tickets. Even peak time tickets can be cheap if you buy them a few weeks in advance, less than half the price.
- Sign up for delay repay and find a website where you can look up how many mins late your trains were to make claiming easier
- Learn how to optimise what carriage you sit in to exit the train near to the platform exit you want. Where to stand on the platform when waiting for the train so you are likely to be near a door and more chance of getting a seat etc.
- Learn how to look up trains and figure out what platform they are likely to come in on. E.g. often the train you want leaving the station won't have a platform, but sometimes you can see what platform a train coming the other direction will arrive at, and often that's the same train.
- Learn what trains run 4-seat wide carriages vs 5-seat wide. 4 is much more comfortable. The Portsmouth line you will be on tends to have a lot of fivers NB some trains are made up of multiple configurations eg front half might have a different number of seats per row than the back
- Get a sense of when a train is likely to be more busy than usual e.g. previous train cancelled. In these cases you may wish to sprint up the platform as soon as it is announced to get ahead of people and more chance of getting a seat or at least a standing spot on the train.
- Midweek is typically busier than Mon/Fri
- Airline seats typically give more legroom than if you are facing somebody
- Season tickets prices typically go up on 2nd Jan. So if you are buying an annual ticket buy it on NYE. You'll save loads of money not only on this ticket but also on the renewals in future years.