Wednesday, July 30, 2025
HomeWorldIndiaTrain Fare Hike From July 1: What You Need to Know

Train Fare Hike From July 1: What You Need to Know

Published:

Starting July 1, 2025, train fares across India will get costlier. The Ministry of Railways has announced a fare hike for the first time in five years, affecting AC, sleeper, and second-class tickets on Mail, Express, and premium trains like Rajdhani, Shatabdi, Vande Bharat, and Tejas.

What’s the New Fare Hike?

  • AC Classes (First AC, 2-Tier, 3-Tier, Chair Car):
    Increased by 2 paisa per kilometre.
    Example: A 1,000 km AC journey will now cost ₹20 more.

  • Non-AC Classes (Sleeper, Second Class General, First Class):
    Increased by 1 paisa per kilometre.
    Example: A 1,000 km journey in sleeper/general coach will cost ₹10 more.

  • Ordinary Second Class (Non-AC) Trains:

    • No fare hike for travel up to 500 km.

    • Fare hike for longer distances:
      • ₹5 extra for 501–1,500 km
      • ₹10 extra for 1,501–2,500 km
      • ₹15 extra for 2,501–3,000 km

Who Is Not Affected?

  • Suburban trains (like local trains in cities)

  • Monthly and season pass holders

  • Ordinary second-class passengers traveling up to 500 km

What Else Stays the Same?

  • Reservation fees, superfast charges, and other additional costs remain unchanged.

  • If you’ve already booked your ticket for travel after July 1, you will not be charged extra.

  • However, new tickets issued after July 1 — even on the train — will include the new fare.

Why the Hike?

This move is expected to help Indian Railways earn an additional ₹1,100 crore in the current financial year (2025–26). If the hike had applied to the full year, the extra earnings would be around ₹1,450 crore.

Railways has set a target of earning ₹92,800 crore from passenger services in FY26. Last year, it earned ₹75,215 crore, with over 736 crore passengers traveling by train.

Some Important Facts:

  • AC classes bring in over 54% of passenger revenue, but only 4.8% of total passengers use them.

  • Sleeper and General classes carry 37% of passengers.

  • Suburban trains serve the most, about 57% of all passengers.

  • While freight earns 65% of the Railways’ revenue, the passenger segment contributes about 30%.

  • A Parliamentary report showed that suburban services recover just 30% of their cost, and non-AC services recover 39%. AC classes make only a small surplus of 3.5%.

(source-upstox)

From July 1, train travel in India will become slightly more expensive — especially for long-distance and AC class passengers. Short-distance and local train commuters won’t see any change. The Railways hopes this small fare adjustment will help cover rising operational costs without putting too much burden on passengers.

Related articles

spot_img

Recent articles

spot_img

Social Media

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe