Britain’s changing patterns of rail travel (RailTech)

When Great British Railways eventually succeeds Network Rail as the infrastructure and management agency for the UK network, it will inherit a much-changed railway. In terms of passenger usage, and the reasons customers give for boarding a train in the UK, the market is shifting into something more akin to the 1970s, rather than heading towards the 2030s. Great British Railways Transition Team has already been active in compiling statistics and their latest announcement suggests that leisure travel is surging ahead, making the railway travel pattern more resemble that of a bygone age, when holiday relief train and weekend specials were a critical answer to demand patterns.

Leisure travel is surging, According to figures compiled by the Great British Railways Transition Teams (GBRTT) – the formative body tasked with putting in place the management structure that will replace Network Rail and many administrative functions currently handled by government departments or franchised operators. The GBRTT figures in their latest Train Travel Snapshot have revealed a significant boost in quarterly rail revenue, driven primarily by a surge in leisure travel. The analysis indicates that the rail industry is gradually rebounding from the pandemic depression, with total revenue increasing by 13 per cent, amounting to 295 million pounds (345 million euros).

Experimentally abolished peak fares

Quarterly figures from the GBRTT, covering 1 April 1 to 30 June 2023, demonstrate a healthy recovery in confidence for Britain’s railways. Passenger analysis shows a 19 per cent quarter-on-quarter growth in revenue from leisure travel. That robust contribution is the most positive indicator of an overall positive trend. Leisure travel accounted for more than 75 per cent of the increase in rail revenue during this period, underscoring its pivotal role in the industry’s recovery. That has resulted in higher loading on what were previously regarded as ‘off-peak’ operations, although no operator has responded by designating any additional peak hour restrictions. In fact at least one operator (ScotRail) has experimentally abolished peak fares altogether – at least for six months.

A graphic using a train motif on a viaduct to illustrate the split between standard class passengers, business travellers and fist class passengers

Commuting and business travel also experienced growth, of six per cent and eight per cent respectively. GBRTT statisticians put those figures down to a belated return to offices and regular business activities. As more individuals resume office-based work, says a report accompanying the figures, the railway sector is adapting to the evolving needs of customers. in this case, adapting is a case of back to the future, with greater emphasis on out-of-peak travel provision.

Think about future demand

Industry sources have given a cautious welcome to the figures. “These hugely encouraging GBRTT numbers are further evidence that passengers are returning to the railway in a big way”, said Darren Caplan, Chief Executive of the Railway Industry Association, which represents the supply chain. “It’s a reminder that as a country we must not take our foot off the pedal of rail investment and that we need to think about future demand today by planning capacity for tomorrow. Ultimately this benefits customers – both [passenger] rail and freight [operations] – as well as the public purse, which gets better value for money as we seek to develop world-class rail infrastructure and rolling stock in the years ahead.”

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