Indian Railways Revises Fares from Dec 26: What Commuters Need to Know

Indian Railways has announced a revised fare structure effective December 26, 2025, aiming to balance passenger affordability with operational sustainability. The changes introduce a graded increase for Ordinary Non-AC services, with no hike for journeys under 215 km to protect short-distance commuters. For Mail and Express trains, fares have been uniformly rationalized at an increase of 2 paise per kilometer across all non-AC and AC classes. Importantly, suburban fares, season tickets, and ancillary charges like reservation fees remain unchanged, and only tickets booked on or after December 26 will reflect the new rates.

Key Points: New Indian Rail Fares Effective Dec 26: Key Changes Explained

  • No fare change for suburban services
  • Graded increase for ordinary non-AC class
  • Mail/Express fares up by 2 paise/km
  • Tickets booked before Dec 26 unaffected
3 min read

Know about revised rail fares kicking in from tomorrow

Indian Railways revises passenger fares from Dec 26. No change for suburban travel; see new rates for ordinary, sleeper, and express trains.

"ensuring that short-distance and daily commuters are not impacted - Ministry of Railways"

New Delhi, Dec 25

Indian Railways has rationalised its passenger fare structure with effect from December 26, to balance affordability for passengers and sustainability of its operations, the Ministry of Railways said in a statement on Thursday.

The ministry clarified that under the revised fare structure, there is no change in fares for suburban services and season tickets, including both suburban and non-suburban routes.

For Ordinary Non-AC (Non-Suburban) services, fares have been rationalised in a graded manner across Second Class Ordinary, Sleeper Class Ordinary, and First Class Ordinary.

In Second Class Ordinary, there is no increase in fare for journeys up to 215 km, ensuring that short-distance and daily commuters are not impacted.

For distances from 216 km to 750 km, the fare increases by Rs 5. For longer journeys, the increase is applied in steps - Rs 10 for distances between 751 km and 1250 km, Rs 15 for distances between 1251 km and 1750 km, and Rs 20 for distances between 1751 km and 2250 km, the statement explained.

In Sleeper Class Ordinary and First Class Ordinary, fares have been revised uniformly at the rate of 1 paise per kilometre for non-suburban journeys, ensuring a gradual and limited increase in fares.

In Mail and Express trains, the fare increase has been rationalised at 2 paise per kilometre across Non-AC and AC classes. This includes Sleeper Class, First Class, AC Chair Car, AC 3-Tier, AC 2-Tier, and AC First Class. As an illustration, for a 500 km journey in non-AC Mail and Express coaches, passengers will pay only about Rs 10 extra, the statement further explains.

The existing basic fares of major train services, including Tejas Rajdhani, Rajdhani, Shatabdi, Duronto, Vande Bharat, Humsafar, Amrit Bharat, Tejas, Mahamana, Gatimaan, Antyodaya, Garib Rath, Jan Shatabdi, Yuva Express, Namo Bharat Rapid Rail, and Ordinary non-suburban services (excluding AC MEMU/DEMU, where applicable), have been revised in line with the approved class-wise basic fare increases. The revision has been carried out uniformly and in a calibrated manner across applicable classes, the statement said.

Notably, no changes have been made in reservation fees, superfast surcharges, or other ancillary charges, which will continue to be levied as per existing rules. GST applicability remains unchanged, and fares will continue to be rounded off according to prevailing norms, the statement pointed out.

The revised fares are applicable only on tickets booked on or after 26 December 2025. Tickets booked before this date will not attract any additional charges, even if the journey is undertaken after the effective date, the statement further explained.

The fare list displayed at stations will also be updated to reflect the new fares effective from December 26, the statement added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
Finally some clarity! The 1-2 paise per km hike sounds minimal on paper, but it adds up for families traveling during festivals. At least they're not touching reservation fees or GST. Hope the extra revenue is used for cleaner coaches and better punctuality.
A
Aman W
Respectfully, while the hike is small, it's still an increase during tough economic times. Railways should first focus on cutting wasteful expenditure and improving efficiency before passing even minor costs to the common man. The principle matters.
P
Priya S
Appreciate the detailed breakdown. The graded increase makes sense - longer journeys pay a bit more. Good that suburban and season tickets are safe. My monthly pass for work remains the same, thank goodness! 🙏
K
Karthik V
The timing right after Christmas is interesting. But overall, a Rs. 10 increase for a 500 km AC journey? That's less than a cup of chai. If this helps maintain the trains, it's a fair deal. Just please fix the toilets!
N
Nisha Z
Clear communication from Railways is a welcome change. No last-minute confusion. And existing bookings are protected - that's very customer-friendly. Hope the station fare lists are updated promptly to avoid arguments at counters!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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