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Indian Railways To Offer Up To 25% Discount In Some Shatabdi, Tejas Trains

Indian Railways’ move is an answer to stiff competition from roadways and low-cost airlines.

Trains stand at Lokmanya Tilak Terminus in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
Trains stand at Lokmanya Tilak Terminus in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

Faced with stiff competition from roadways and low-cost airlines, railways is set to offer up to 25 percent discount in trains like Shatabdi Express, Tejas and Gatiman Express to bump up ticket sales, according to a senior official.

The discount will be given on the base fare of trains with AC chair car and executive chair car seats and charges like the Goods and Service Tax, reservation fee, superfast tariff and others will be levied separately, the official said on Tuesday.

“Trains with monthly occupancy of less than 50 percent in the previous year are eligible for the discount,” the official said.

The railway ministry has decided to delegate powers to the Principal Commercial Managers of the zones to introduce the discounted fare scheme in the identified trains. However, it has laid down certain guidelines.

Competitive fare should be a criterion while deciding discounted prices, the ministry has said and has given permission to offer discounted fares on all parts of the journey, be it the first leg, intermediate sections or the last part, the official said.

The discount, the ministry has said, can be offered yearly, half-yearly, seasonally or during weekends. Once the scheme is in place, no other discounts such as the graded discount in Shatabdi Express trains or flexi-fare will be applicable, the official said.

The zones have been asked to identify such trains with low occupancy by Sept. 30, the ministry has said, adding that efforts should be made by the zones to ramp up occupancy.

The zones have also been asked to file a report after four months of implementing the scheme, the official said. The railways had introduced a similar scheme while removing dynamic pricing from certain trains with low occupancy.

It had discontinued the flexi-fare scheme in 15 trains in which average unidirectional monthly occupancy was less than 50 percent.