Less than half of travellers satisfied with South West Trains

Less than half of travellers satisfied with South West Trains Less than half of travellers satisfied with South West Trains

More than half of train companies have a customer satisfaction score of 50% or lower, according to a survey.

And overall, only 22% of train travellers feel their service is improving despite above-inflation fare rises last month, according to the Which? survey.

Bottom in the 19-company satisfaction table was First Capital Connect, with only 40% of its passengers satisfied with its service.

The next least-satisfied passengers were those travelling on Greater Anglia trains, with the company scoring only 42%.

The criticism came after it emerged that train company bosses are enjoying six-figure salaries, just as rail passengers are enduring above-inflation fare rises.

The East Coast line, where services are run in the public sector, has as many as eight directors on annual salaries of above £100,000, one earning between £161,000 and £180,000.

The highest paid director at CrossCountry earns £222,000, including pension contributions, as of 2011, while Sir David Higgins, the chief executive of rail infrastructure company Network Rail, was on an annual basic salary of £560,000 as of March 31 2012.

Other companies where satisfaction levels were low included Southeastern (43% satisfied), First Great Western (43%), Northern (44%) and London Midland (45%).

Also below 50% were South West Trains (47%) Southern (48%) and Arriva Trains Wales (48%). The East Midlands Trains' figure was 50%, leaving 10 companies at 50% or worse and nine at better than 50%.

Top of the satisfaction table, compiled from responses from 7,500 regular train users, was West Coast main line operator Virgin Trains with a score of 67%.

London Overground was second with 65%, while the London to Tilbury and Southend company c2c and Merseyrail both scored 64%.

On London Overground, where new trains have been introduced in recent months, 60% of users said they felt the service had improved in the past two years.

But Which? said at the other end of the scale, a quarter of passengers reckoned they were now getting a worse service on London Midland where staff shortages have caused problems in recent months.

Which? said: ''One First Capital Connect customer told us: 'The price has increased and the trains get more and more crowded. I never see any improvements for the extra money I am paying'.

''And a Southeastern passenger said: 'The prices are terrible, the service is bad and trains are often delayed, cancelled and dirty'.''

The survey also showed that 40% of train travellers are likely to reduce the number of journeys they make as a result of the recent price increases which have season tickets rise by an average of 4.2%.

But a third of commuters said they did not have an alternative way of getting to work and would just have to pay more.

In a separate investigation Which? found train ticket machines also offered travellers poor service. In a snapshot investigation, looking at 11 London mainline station ticket machines, Which? found certain tickets not available or unclear information that could either prevent people getting the cheapest ticket or risk being fined for travelling with an invalid ticket.

Which? executive director Richard Lloyd said: ''With 1.5 billion train journeys made every year and eight of the 17 UK rail franchises up for grabs in the next two years, customer service should be top of the agenda for every train operating company.

''It is good to see some are performing well on service, but customers clearly feel others need to do better.''

He went on: ''Passengers tell us they are fed up with trains that are delayed, overcrowded and dirty. This is especially disappointing as many commuters can't shop around or change the company they travel with.

''Train companies need to play fair with their customers, especially when they are being asked to pay more for their journeys.''

Responding to the Which? survey, a spokesman for the Association of Train Operating Companies said: ''The independent watchdog Passenger Focus surveys up to eight times as many people a year and last month reported 85% of passengers are satisfied with their service - a record high.''

Shadow transport secretary Maria Eagle said: ''While taxpayers continue to fund the rail industry to the tune of £3.5 billion every year, rail companies must do better and the Government needs to hold them to account on behalf of passengers and taxpayers.

''This Government are also approving the closure of many station ticket offices to cut costs, but as this survey shows where people have to rely on machines, they often can't get the best ticket.

''David Cameron broke his promise to commuters to cap fare rises at 1% above inflation, with some passengers facing fare rises of up to 9.2% ''The Government should come clean with commuters that they are allowing the closure of ticket offices and that it was their decision to cave in to pressure from the private train companies to let them hike ticket prices beyond the so-called cap.''

Bob Crow, general secretary of the RMT transport union, said: ''It is about time these basket-case private train companies like First Capital Connect were booted off Britain's railways for good and their franchises returned to public ownership.

''This current tolerance of these private rail spivs by the Government is reward for total and abject failure on an epic scale.''

These were the customer satisfaction scores for each train company, according to the Which? survey:

COMPANY SCORE

  • Virgin Trains 67%
  • c2c 64%
  • Merseyrail 64%
  • Chiltern Railways 62%
  • East Coast 58%
  • First Transpennine Express 54%
  • ScotRail 53%
  • CrossCountry 51%
  • East Midlands Trains 50%
  • Arriva Trains Wales 48%
  • Southern 48%
  • South West Trains 47%
  • London Midland 45%
  • Northern 44%
  • First Great Western 43%
  • South Eastern 43%
  • Greater Anglia 42%
  • First Capital Connect 40%

Comments(9)

chunky_lover says...
7:18am Mon 18 Feb 13

It's not so much the trains, more the people who travel by train.

ToastyTea says...
10:32am Mon 18 Feb 13

well there's a surprise, the trains are terrible.
I've had to catch trains back from London recently around rush hour and it's crammed like sardines all stood up, horrible especially considering how much tickets are.
Same as when I used to get train from Eastleigh to Soton everyday, no seats and always late.
So glad dont need to use them much now.

Beer Monster says...
10:56am Mon 18 Feb 13

Totally agreed ToastyTea - I used to commute from Hythe to London, don't recall ever getting a seat on the train back.

Subject48 says...
10:58am Mon 18 Feb 13

A 3 hour train to derby from southampton is £100 return. £100!? I can fly from eastleigh for less money to say amsterdam or another european destination.

This does not make any sense. Makes me so angry.

bazzeroz says...
11:35am Mon 18 Feb 13

I expect the other half couldn't get on the train for the survey!

NewForestStu says...
1:53pm Mon 18 Feb 13

I am so delighted to have the South West Trains / Stagecoach monopoly providing train travel for where i require....they are absolutely fab.....especially when they stick 6-8 Gestapo on one platform checking tickets as you leave the station where typically you would be hard pushed to find anymore than 30 passengers leaving the service. No wonder we saw such a small increase in train fares this year.

Stephen J says...
6:17pm Mon 18 Feb 13

Subject48 wrote:
A 3 hour train to derby from southampton is £100 return. £100!? I can fly from eastleigh for less money to say amsterdam or another european destination.

This does not make any sense. Makes me so angry.
What? You could get a return ticket to Derby for £72, probably less if you look for it. And yes, you can fly to Amsterdam for £100, but won't it cost you another £100 to get back?

kingnotail says...
11:15pm Mon 18 Feb 13

Renationalise the railways now!

soton-mike80 says...
1:34pm Tue 19 Feb 13

Stephen J wrote:
Subject48 wrote:
A 3 hour train to derby from southampton is £100 return. £100!? I can fly from eastleigh for less money to say amsterdam or another european destination.

This does not make any sense. Makes me so angry.
What? You could get a return ticket to Derby for £72, probably less if you look for it. And yes, you can fly to Amsterdam for £100, but won't it cost you another £100 to get back?
£84.83 return flight, all costs included, just researched using flybe.com arranging a flight in July, out on a Monday afternoon, back on a Thursday evening - Flying can be cheaper than the trains and much quicker in most cases! I always fly to Manchester and back because the train costs more than a flight booked more than three months in advance.

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