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  2. Senior Railcard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senior_Railcard

    The SNR variation, introduced when the Railcard was renamed "Senior Railcard". This wording remains in use today. On the APTIS, PORTIS/SPORTIS and other computerised ticket issuing systems, a "status code" field is provided on each ticket issued. This is left blank if an adult is travelling at full (undiscounted) fare; but if any discount or ...

  3. Concessionary fares on the British railway network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concessionary_fares_on_the...

    The Network Railcard is the main example of a local railcard, but various others are available in much more localised areas, or even for a single line. In many cases, adult tickets are issued with the status code LOCRC (Local Railcard); child tickets show CHLOC. However, some of the Railcards have unique status codes assigned to them.

  4. Network Railcard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_Railcard

    These codes continued in use when the Network Railcard was introduced in its place, until the major change in June 2002. When the "new" Network Railcard was introduced, with the £10.00 minimum fare and altered child discount, there were still a large number of "old" Network Railcards in use, with no minimum fare restriction and £1.00 flat ...

  5. APTIS ticket features - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APTIS_ticket_features

    Rounding was done in the passenger's favour: for example, a Railcard discount of one-third would be rounded to 34% (i.e. 66% of the full fare), downwards to the nearest £0.05. In fact, APTIS could apply any whole discount from 1% up to 99% and it was how the various companies decided what discount to apply e.g. Senior Citizen at 33%.

  6. Smartcards on National Rail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smartcards_on_National_Rail

    The symbol used on smartcards issued by National Rail train operating companies. Contactless smartcards are being progressively introduced as an alternative option to paper ticketing on the National Rail system of Great Britain.

  7. 16–25 Railcard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16–25_Railcard

    The railcard was designed to reduce the number of people incurring fines for forgetting their railcard and remove the wait for obtaining a physical railcard in the post or at a station. A phone can display the railcard without an active internet connection, as long as the device had connected to the internet in the past 72 hours.

  8. Disabled Persons Railcard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disabled_Persons_Railcard

    The Railcard initially cost £5. Its price increased to £14 in the 1990s and then in 2006 to £18. A three-year Railcard was also introduced in September 2006 at £48. The price increased again in January 2011, to its current cost of £20 for a year. The three year railcard was increased the same year, costing £54 (£18 per year).

  9. Oyster card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster_card

    The cards are encoded to offer discounted fares and are available for students in full-time education (30% off season tickets), 16+ cards (half the adult-rate for single journeys on the Underground, London Overground, DLR and a limited number of National Rail services, discounted period Travelcards, free travel on buses and trams for students ...

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