Rail fares rise by 4.6% in England and Wales
The government says fares need to rise so it can invest in the rail system, but Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander acknowledged passengers were "frustrated" by delays and cancellations.
Although the government plans to renationalise three rail operators this year, this is not expected to bring ticket prices down.
The Campaign for Better Transport said the latest increase "piles further misery on hard-pressed households" and called for lower fares.
The rail fare rise for regulated tickets includes most season tickets covering commuter routes in England, which can cost thousands of pounds.
Some off-peak returns on long-distance journeys, and flexible tickets for travelling in and around cities will also rise.
Train operators set their own prices for unregulated fares, but these tend to increase by a similar amount to regulated fares, including on lines that have already been renationalised.
About 45% of train fares are regulated in England, Wales and Scotland, but the 4.6% rise relates to travel in England and Wales only.
In Scotland, rail fares are set to increase by 3.8% in April.
In Northern Ireland, the nationalised Translink service said no decision had yet been taken by the Department for Infrastructure on whether rail fares will go up in 2025.
The cost of most railcards has also gone up by about £5, from about £30, but disabled railcards remain the same price.
Adrian Rose, 50, from Sittingbourne in Kent says hiking rail fares when they are already "crazily expensive" is not justifiable.
For him and his wife and two daughters to drive from Kent to see relatives in Newcastle is no more than £100 in fuel for the family, whereas to go by train can cost more than £400 if booking close to the departure date.
"The cost is prohibitive," he says.
"I would happily take the train, but for over four times the cost? I could have a week's holiday for that money."
But Celia Downie, who uses the train regularly for work and leisure, says she will continue to do so "however much it costs", because "I can work on the train and I believe it is environmentally proper to do so".
But the 68-year-old from Bristol, who has a Senior Railcard, also believes prices are too high for families and says sometimes the experience of cramped carriages is "absolutely appalling".
Heidi Alexander said she understood passenger frustration that fares keep rising "despite unacceptable levels of delays and cancellations".
However, she said it was the lowest absolute increase in fares for three years.
But the Campaign for Better Transport said the fare increases would add to the pressure on households, coming on top of higher food and energy costs.
Michael Solomon Williams, head of campaigns at the group, said high ticket prices were the "number one barrier to getting more people travelling by rail", and called on the government to bring down fares as part of rail reforms.
"The majority of the public are in favour of a publicly owned railway, but this support all but vanishes if fares were to continue to increase," he said.
The campaign group said out of 40 commuter routes into London, annual season tickets for three will top £6,000 for the first time, with 10 others already there.
Annual season tickets from Canterbury and Southampton into London will go up by more than £300 to £7,100 and £7,477 respectively.
The government plans to renationalise rail firms as operators' contracts either end or reach a break.
Last year, it said South Western Railway would be renationalised in May 2025, C2C in July 2025, and Greater Anglia in autumn 2025.
It is setting up a new arms-length body, Great British Railways (GBR), to take over service contracts currently held by private firms as they expire in the coming years.
Rail fares to rise despite renationalisation plans
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