Cancelled railway tickets will now be charged double

There will be no refund after the departure of train; only four hours before allowed

Update: 2015-11-07 11:55 GMT
The South Central Railway got Rs 2,768 crore allocations for infrastructure development in the Budget for 2015-16

New Delhi: The railways has doubled the ticket cancellation charge as it has proposed to change the refund rules to help genuine passengers getting confirmed tickets. There will be no refund after the departure of train and one has to get the refund four hours before the departure, according to the new refund rules. The revised refund rules will be effective from November 12.

While cancellation fee of second class confirmed ticket in 48 hours before the scheduled departure of the train will be increased from Rs 30 to Rs 60, the Third AC ticket will cost Rs 180 as against Rs 90 earlier. For waitlisted ticket and reserve against cancellation (RAC), one has to avail the refund up to half an hour before the scheduled departure of the train and there will be no refund after that, as per the new rules. The Second Sleeper class cancellation has been increased from Rs 60 to Rs 120, the Second AC has doubled up from Rs 100 to Rs 200, according to the notification issued today.

The aim of the amendment in the Railway Passengers (Cancellation of Ticket and Refund of Fare) Rules, 2015, is to plug the scope of misuse, said a senior Railway Ministry official. Now between 48 hours and 12 hours before the scheduled departure of the train, cancellation fee was 25 per cent of the ticket. Earlier between 48 hours and 6 hours before the scheduled departure of the train, the cancellation fee was 25 per cent of the ticket. Earlier from 6 hours before the scheduled departure of the train and up to 2 hours after the actual departure of the train, cancellation fee was 50 per cent of the ticket.

However, revised rules stipulate that between 12 hours and 4 hours before the scheduled departure of the train, cancellation fee will be 50 per cent of the ticket. Rules were revised to discourage touts and those ticketing agents indulging in black marketing of tickets, said the official. Railways has also decided to enable certain unreserved ticket counters to allow refund of reserved ticket.

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