If, say, I book a journey in advance on Trainline that involves 3 legs (2 connections) and I miss either the 2nd or the 3rd leg due to a previous delay, does the ticket then become invalid for the next train after the one I've missed?
I ask mainly because I might have made a saving by booking the earlier train, the later one costing more.
I think it depends. If your tickets are off-peak and the delay pushes you into peak time then you may have a problem. My experience is that staff on the trains are fairly relaxed but the RPOs on the platforms at major stations will write you up for prosecution at the slightest opportunity, and will refuse to check whether a delay has occurred.
Best to get evidence of any delay - phone pic of departure board, etc.
UK Train Forum [1] is a good(?) place for ticket advice, but some of the people on that site make UKCers seem normal.....
When I have looked at tickets on Trainline recently I see that they are offering "Split " ticketing, When I checked the Split tickets t&cs were for specific trains/journeys only.
We encountered a significant problem with split ticketing in that your seat reservations are not carried through so at best you may have to change seats /carriages or worst end up standing after the split. Not worth it for the saving
Trainline are just an agency, the conditions are set by the rail companies and explained in detail for particular journeys/legs on the trainline booking page; so it depends on what you bought
> When I have looked at tickets on Trainline recently I see that they are offering "Split " ticketing, When I checked the Split tickets t&cs were for specific trains/journeys only.
yes, it was when buying 'split tickets' that concerned me
I usually travel on Avanti and head for the unreserved carriage, C. Its invariably quieter and cooler, and once you've got your seat, you keep it. Split tickets generally can save me quite a bit.
If you made the purchase at one time, as one journey, but with split ticketing (e.g. using one of the split ticketing websites, or some of the mainstream sites that are now offering split ticketing), then if you missed a connection, the subsequent train companies should carry you on the next available service, if you explain nicely, what has happened, as soon as your ticket is checked. Split ticketing is now "a thing".
I'm not convinced that's the case. I've had one occasion where a tran has been cancelled and not allowed to use my ticket on the next train run by a different operator as well as the exact situation described by the OP where I had to wait for a train from the same operator. I imagine you might be able to pay for the connection and then claim back but I've never tried.
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