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Free Bus Pass

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I am a 63 yr old male and although I reach my state pension age at 65 I have just found out that I am entitled to a FREE BUS PASS now!

The government now works this out from when the equivalent FEMALE state pension is due. Check the government/council/transport websites to find all the information.
It is dependent on the date you were born. (I was born in Feb 1953 and was entitled to this from 6th Jan 2016).
Please note no one tells you this and your council does not automatically contact you to let you know about it.

GOOD LUCK.

JohnWhy
«1345

Comments

  • peewhyeff
    peewhyeff Posts: 1,251 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper I've been Money Tipped!
    In wales I am eligible for bus pass at age 60. However mu sister in Cheshire cannot claim her's until she reaches state pension age...has to wsit until nearly 67.
  • SailorSam
    SailorSam Posts: 22,754 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    We can get our Merseytravel pass at 60 for local trains; buses, and ferries. I've just renewed it and now i'm 63 the pass isn't just a local one, it's national. I don't think i used it the first year i had it, but i've realised just what a good thing it is, the car hardly ever comes out of the garage.
    Liverpool is one of the wonders of Britain,
    What it may grow to in time, I know not what.

    Daniel Defoe: 1725.
  • Marcon
    Marcon Posts: 14,347 Forumite
    Ninth Anniversary 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    If you live in a London borough, don't forget you can get an Oyster 60+ card - free travel on tubes, buses and trains in Greater London. Cost is £10 and lasts until you reach age 65 and become eligible for a London Freedom Pass. Link: https://tfl.gov.uk/fares-and-payments/adult-discounts-and-concessions/60-london-oyster
    Googling on your question might have been both quicker and easier, if you're only after simple facts rather than opinions!  
  • redagila
    redagila Posts: 6,419 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper I've been Money Tipped!
    SailorSam wrote: »
    We can get our Merseytravel pass at 60 for local trains; buses, and ferries. I've just renewed it and now i'm 63 the pass isn't just a local one, it's national. I don't think i used it the first year i had it, but i've realised just what a good thing it is, the car hardly ever comes out of the garage.



    Are you saying that your pass gives you free travel on all trains, buses and ferries nationwide?


    Here in Sussex, we get the free bus pass which is valid nationally but have to buy discount card for the railway which is slightly discounted by the District Council.
  • SailorSam
    SailorSam Posts: 22,754 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    No. Local buses; trains, and ferries, But the National part is only for buses.
    I can't get on a coach from here to London or Birmingham, only their local buses. So for example if i wanted to go up to Scotland i'd have to change buses half-a-dozen times.
    Liverpool is one of the wonders of Britain,
    What it may grow to in time, I know not what.

    Daniel Defoe: 1725.
  • Roger1
    Roger1 Posts: 1,603 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    SailorSam wrote: »
    So for example if i wanted to go up to Scotland i'd have to change buses half-a-dozen times.
    But in Scotland, you'd need to pay. English (and Welsh?) bus passes are not valid in Scotland, and vice versa.
  • SailorSam
    SailorSam Posts: 22,754 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    I think we can use them in Wales but not Scotland.
    I don't suppose that many use the National part of the pass much. But if you were say on holiday in Wales; London, or Cornwall it would be handy to have for the free travel. And i have read about some people who have spent two or three week travelling all around the Country on local buses and stopping for bed & breakfast each night.
    Liverpool is one of the wonders of Britain,
    What it may grow to in time, I know not what.

    Daniel Defoe: 1725.
  • moneyistooshorttomention
    moneyistooshorttomention Posts: 17,940 Forumite
    edited 2 August 2016 at 11:28AM
    A couple of the posts are a bit confusing.

    THE free buspass isnt a national one. It can only be used in the part of the country one lives in.

    I live in Wales and can only use my buspass in Wales. If I were still living in England and had got my buspass there - then I could only use it in England.

    Presumably the same applies to Scotland and Northern Ireland? - ie that one can only use the buspass in that part of the country.

    It is a bit of a misnomer to call it a "national" bus pass.

    If I've got that wrong and it really is possible to use it across the country - then I'll hold my hands up and apologise for getting that wrong. But - I've just paid for a weekly buspass any time I go home to England (as I've assumed my Welsh buspass won't cover me there). It certainly would be nice if one could use it countrywide....

    I think those who say they've spent 2/3 weeks travelling round the country on their buspass must have stuck to the bit they were in? or, alternatively, I think maybe these buspasses were able to be used nationwide back when they started - but have since been restricted to one's own bit of the country?
  • carlislelass
    carlislelass Posts: 1,776 Forumite
    Debt-free and Proud!
    We used our bus pass on the Isle of Wight plus various counties. Not allowed in. Scotland or. Wales
  • Gers
    Gers Posts: 13,137 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    edited 2 August 2016 at 4:01PM
    The card isn't a UK-wide one but a country specifc - England, Wales, Scotland, NI i.e. national. It's called 'national concession card'.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_National_Concessionary_Travel_Scheme

    I can use mine for Scotland and as far as (English) Berwick. Discounted travel on Glasgow Subway. Here it's called 'national entitlement card'

    http://www.transport.gov.scot/public-transport/concessionary-travel-people-aged-60-or-disability

    The Edinburgh tram system is excluded from the national card as it was privately funded though Edinburgh residents who have a 'concession' card can use it free.
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