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Bus fares rise across West Midlands and Coventry

BBC Published Jun 8, 2010 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Adult 'short hop' fare increased from £1.20 to £1.50 in Birmingham and the Black Country.
1.2 GBP · adult short hop fare1.5 GBP · adult short hop fare
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Citation-ready fact
Adult regional day saver fare increased from £3.30 to £3.50.
3.3 GBP · adult regional day saver fare3.5 GBP · adult regional day saver fare
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Citation-ready fact
Fares on National Express West Midlands buses rose by up to 25% after an 18-month freeze.
at least 25 % · bus fares
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Citation-ready fact
The £1.70 adult single fare was frozen and not increased in the recent rise.
1.7 GBP · adult single fare
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Citation-ready fact
The company offered every driver in the West Midlands a lump sum payment in exchange for amending their pay rate.
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Citation-ready fact
The fare freeze lasted 17 months before the recent increase.
17 months · fare freeze
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Citation-ready fact
Drivers were offered voluntary pay cuts, affecting only longer-serving drivers in the highest wage bracket.
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Fares on National Express West Midlands buses have risen by up to a quarter after a freeze of nearly 18 months.

The company, which runs services across Birmingham, the Black Country and Coventry, brought in the rise for cash fares this week.

It said it had pegged the price since last year but could no longer afford to continue.

The company - also known as Travel West Midlands - is also asking drivers to take a voluntary pay cut.

The rises include an adult 'short hop' fare for one or two stages changing from £1.20 to £1.50 in Birmingham and the Black Country, while an adult regional day saver goes from £3.30 to £3.50.

National Express West Midlands managing director Neil Barker said it was the first rise for 17 months but the company had frozen its most popular fare, the £1.70 adult single.

"We committed to holding fares into the New Year, which we have done," he said.

"We're halfway through the year now and that is a position we can't hold any longer."

Mr Barker said the pay cuts only affected longer-serving drivers in the highest wage bracket but were entirely voluntary.

He said: "Our top rate of driver pay is above the market rate and increases we have made to other pay rates over the last few years has reduced the natural turnover of staff.

"The business will offer every driver in the West Midlands an opportunity to amend their pay rate in return for a lump sum of money."

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