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To travel, just present your MoD ID card or evidence that you are a veteran, such as Veterans Railcard, to railway staff. @JSHeappey @BWallaceMP — Anne-Marie Trevelyan (@annietrev) October 9, 2022
When the Network Card changed to the more restrictive "Network Railcard" format, with children receiving a 60% discount subject to a minimum £1.00 fare (rather than a £1.00 flat fare in all cases) and adults being subject to a £10.00 minimum fare on weekdays, the Gold Card's conditions remained the same as before, and have not changed since.
The Two Together Railcard is a scheme which gives discounts on certain types of railway ticket in Britain. Launched nationally in 2014 after a successful trial in 2011–12, [ 1] it was the first new Railcard scheme since the 1980s. It is available to any two named individuals aged 16 or over and is priced at £ 30.00 (as of 2024).
A change in October 1988: the background lettering becomes brown. The Senior Railcard is an annual card available to people aged 60 and over, which gives discounts on certain types of railway ticket in Britain. The Railcard has existed in various forms since 1975; the current version is priced at £ 30.00 and is valid for one year, with a 3 ...
The 16–25 Railcard is an annual card giving discounts on certain types of railway ticket in Britain. It is available to anybody aged between 16 and 25 (inclusive), and certain mature students aged 26 and above, and is currently priced at £ 30.00 (as of 19 May 2013). There is no restriction on the number of times the Railcard can be used to ...
Nov. 10—State military and veterans affairs officials say they have canceled the Veterans Day ceremony planned for Saturday at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson due to hazardous road conditions on ...
The Network Railcard is a discount card introduced in 1986 by British Rail, upon the creation of their Network SouthEast sector in parts of Southern England . The card is intended to encourage leisure travel by rail by offering discounts for adults and accompanying children on a wide range of off-peak fares.
Tom Libby and Bill Buchanan together with Sir Bert Massie (RADAR) were tasked to design and develop the 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 ...