Greater Anglia reminds customers of its new summer timetable from Sunday

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Greater Anglia reminds customers of its new summer timetable from Sunday

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Picture of Chloe White

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Greater Anglia new intercity train at diss station
new intercity train at diss station // Credit : Greater Anglia

Rail passengers travelling with are being reminded to check ahead of travelling in case their train times have changed!

The rail operator is bringing in its new summer timetable this Sunday, the 15th of May 2022 with the message to passengers to check their journey ahead of travelling.

Greater Anglia will be introducing more seating and more services, including extra trains for tourists making their way around the region alongside some increases for commuter services to match demand.

From Sunday the 15th of May, the new timetable will be in operation until December and will see:

  • Intercity services operating between Norwich and London running half-hourly throughout the day until 21.00 from Monday to Friday when they become hourly.  Saturdays will see Half-hourly services running until early evening when they become hourly and Sundays will see mainly hourly services.
  • Some extra services with some longer trains will be in operation between , Colchester, Clacton/Walton, Harwich, Braintree, , Southend Victoria, Southminster and London Liverpool Street, including during the evening rush hour.
  • More new and longer trains will operate on routes between , Bishop’s Stortford and London Liverpool Street and the Hertford East line once the platform lengthening works are finished later in the year.
  • Stansted Express services operating between Stansted Airport and London Liverpool Street will be mainly half-hourly with some extra trains during busier times.
  • Rural services operating between Norwich and Lowestoft, Cambridge/Stansted Airport, Sheringham, and Great Yarmouth; between Ipswich and Cambridge, , Lowestoft and Peterborough; and between Marks Tey and Sudbury will continue with services as usual.

Additional summer services will be operating between Norwich and Great Yarmouth on Saturdays from the 21st of May through to the 10th of September and on Mondays and Fridays from the 18th of July to the 2nd of September, which will create more than 66,000 extra seats for holiday-makers during the peak of the summer period.

Further additional early Sunday services will operate between Ipswich and Peterborough, departing Ipswich at 07.55 and returning from Peterborough at 09.50, from the 15th of May through to the 11th of September.

In order to match services to demand, Greater Anglia has been closely monitoring passenger numbers. Passenger figures are still showing lower than pre-pandemic levels at approximately 77% when compared to 2019 throughout the rail operators network with numbers dropping to around 60% for customers commuting to London.

Jamie Burles, Greater Anglia managing director, said:

“We’re making a number of service improvements in our May timetable changes.

“We’ve been monitoring our passenger numbers and listening to customer feedback, so we’re increasing services or running longer trains where possible and appropriate – building on our actions over recent months, where we’ve been adding extra capacity in line with increasing demand.

“The pandemic has changed our railway. We have a different contract with the Government which is wholly funding us. It’s important that we provide the best possible service to our customers and also value for money for taxpayers.

“Over the coming months, we’ll see even more of our new longer trains with all mod cons replace our older trains on commuting routes into London, which will lead to more seats available for our customers and a much-improved travelling experience.

“New trains already in place on our Intercity, Stansted Express and regional services have markedly improved service standards on those routes – including helping us to achieve record-breaking punctuality.

“We’ll continue to monitor passenger numbers and make further adjustments as necessary, always seeking to run a very good service and to encourage more customers to take the train.”

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  1. I wonder why more and more Class 720 trains are in service and the Class 321 & Class 317 that being replaced are ending up to be moved for scrap and the Class 321 Renatus to be moved for storage.

  2. II see with the new timetable GA is back to fleecing customers on London to Sudbury routes, and London and also to the smaller stations en route to Colchester on GEML.

    Advance tickets are only available on Norwich express trains, not the slower trains that stop at stations like WItham, Marks Tey, etc.

    Use a split ticket approach to get cheaper fares to the slow line GEML stations. In some cases (Marks Tey/Sudbury) that means travelling “beyond and back” via Colchester (not shown on split ticket websites, does not add much time overall). There there may not be cut price options for stations like WItham:

    in my quick spot check for this recurring problem, there are cases where fare LST-COL is cheaper (£12 advance) than the LST-Witham, on the same train!

    Advance tickets do not allow a break of journey so you can’t legally stop short, but in some cases you may be able to reduce costs slightly by having an overlapping split ticket that allows legal exit at e.g. WItham

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