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What is the under 22s bus pass

Young people aged 5 to 21, who live in Scotland for at least 6 months a year, can apply for a free bus pass. You can use this to travel on most bus services in Scotland for free.

Your Young Scot Card (Young Scot NEC) or other National Entitlement Card (NEC) will be your bus pass. You can either:

  • update your existing Young Scot Card or other NEC
  • apply for a new card online  or through your local council

For more information about the under 22s bus pass scheme, visit freebus.scot .

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The Scottish Government

Consultation on Free Bus Travel for Older and Disabled People and Modern Apprentices

Closed 17 Nov 2017

Opened 25 Aug 2017

0131 244 0781

[email protected]

Published responses

View submitted responses where consent has been given to publish the response.

concessionary travel scheme scotland

Consultation is an essential part of the Scottish Government’s policy making process. It gives us the opportunity to seek your opinions. This Consultation sets out the issues under consideration and asks you questions about what we are proposing. After the Consultation is closed we will publish responses where we have been given permission to do so.

Responses are analysed and used as part of the policy making process, along with a range of other available information and evidence. Responses to this Consultation will help to inform the development of future rules and guidance on the National Concessionary Travel Scheme in Scotland.

Why your views matter

The Scottish Government is launching this Consultation to seek your views on the concessionary travel scheme for older and disabled people (“the Scheme”).

This popular and valued scheme improves access for older and disabled people to essential services and opens up participation in family and other social activities that would otherwise not be affordable, ultimately offering independence to people who rely on bus travel.

Over 1.3 million bus pass holders benefit from the Scotland-wide free bus travel scheme for older and disabled people. They make around 145 million bus journeys each year representing around a third of all bus journeys made in Scotland. Free bus travel is delivering one of the Scottish Government’s key commitments, one we believe brings important benefits for all our eligible older and disabled people.

We are committed to continuing to provide free bus travel for those who need it the most, and therefore want to look at options to ensure the longer-term sustainability of the scheme so that free bus travel can continue to benefit those who have the greatest need.

We are also aware of the particular challenges facing younger people and will be asking for your views on our proposal to provide free bus travel to Modern Apprentices and how that might be taken forward. We will also be looking to provide free companion travel for eligible disabled children under five who are not currently covered by the Scheme.

Whatever happens going forward, if you already have a bus pass, or obtain one before any changes are made, you will not lose it! Those with a bus pass will continue to access the benefits of the Scheme. In addition we will not be making any adverse changes to the existing eligibility criteria for those with a disability.

Please consider the following questions and give us your views. Further information on the Scheme and on all questions can be found in the consultation document attached below.

Download the consultation paper.

  • Consultation on free bus travel for older and disabled people and modern apprentices 813.3 KB (PDF document)
  • Concessionary travel - one pager 3.3 MB (PDF document)
  • Large print version 729.9 KB (PDF document)
  • Easy read version 177.4 KB (PDF document)
  • Co-chomhairle air Siubhal Saor is an-asgaidh air Busaichean airson Seann Daoine, Daoine air a bheil Ciorram agus Preantasan Ùra 803.9 KB (PDF document)
  • Consultation paper on transport.gov.scot

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concessionary travel scheme scotland

Bus accessibility, affordability, and reliance across Scotland

In a 2021 SPICe blog, we explored Scottish Government data on bus accessibility. In that blog, we looked at data on bus accessibility broken down by urban rural classification and by deprivation. This blog updates some of the detail and builds on accessibility analysis by looking at the reliance on and affordability of bus transport.

We wanted to look at the affordability of bus connections between towns and the nearest key services such as jobcentres, hospitals, or banks. However, as it turns out, our work produced more questions than answers, highlighting some important data gaps in the process.

For context, bus fares in Scotland are not regulated, and services and availability are not centrally controlled. In many cases, what is available and the cost of it will depend on small local providers.

Recent statistics

Our 2021 blog was based on bus accessibility data for 2019. Whilst the Scottish Government hasn’t updated this, there are more recent statistics which illustrate the use of buses in Scotland.

The Scottish Transport Statistics 2022 showed that 234 million journeys were made by bus in 2021-22. Pandemic-affected years aside, this is a historic low since the statistical series began in 1989-90. In 2018-19, the last full year of data pre-pandemic, there were 373 million journeys. This incomplete recovery is not surprising as, pre-pandemic, journey numbers have fallen every year since a peak of 487 million in 2007-08 (a 54 per cent drop).

Almost two fifths of these journeys were made under the National Concessionary Travel Scheme. There were 1.5 million people with National Concessionary Travel cards in Scotland in 2022, which mostly focus on providing free travel for under-22s, over-60s, and people with disabilities.

The bus industry received £329 million in funding from local or central government in 2021-22. £223 million of this was Scottish Government support for concessions schemes, £55 million was local authority support, and £51 million came through the Scottish Government’s Bus Service Operators Grant (since replaced by the Network Support Grant ). Passenger revenue in 2021-22 stood at £265 million in Scotland.

Transport Statistics show that bus fares in Scotland decreased by 3 per cent between 2017 and 2022 in real terms (adjusting for the effects of inflation). In cash prices, i.e., viewing fare increases in the way that a consumer would, fares have risen by almost 11 per cent over the same time. The impact of fare increases has been slightly less than Great Britain as a whole, where fares have risen by 14 per cent in cash terms and stayed the same in real terms.

Who might rely on buses?

It’s interesting to consider how many people do not have access to a car and might be reliant on bus services. According to the Scottish Transport Statistics 2022 , those who had used a bus the previous day were most likely to be those in employment, young adults or those aged 60-69 (i.e., those already targeted by concessionary schemes), and those in the 20 per cent of people with the lowest income.

Adding to that, looking at car use from the same statistical release , people from ethnic minority groups, people looking after the home or family, people who are unemployed, and those on low incomes are the least likely to hold a driving license. Just over a third (34 per cent) of single parents, and 38 per cent of people living in the most deprived areas of Scotland, have no access to a car.

The results from TATIS 2021 are slightly different, as different measures are being used. In this case, a social survey is used. Transport and Travel in Scotland (TATIS) 2021 statistics are based on the results from the Scottish Household Survey. These contribute to the Scottish Transport Statistics, but because the overall collation approach differs, the statistics may tell a different story between the two.

This data also suggests that those on a low income or younger age groups are most likely to use a bus, along with those living in deprived areas. Sample sizes on non-White ethnicities are too low to tell a full story.

The TATIS 2021 statistics look at where people live based on Scotland’s Urban Rural Classification. Unsurprisingly, bus use was highest in large urban areas, with 42 per cent of adults using the bus monthly or more frequently. In small remote towns this was 15 per cent and 17 per cent of people had no access to a car. In accessible rural areas, 17 per cent of people had used a bus within the past month and 6 per cent of people had no access to a car. And in remote rural areas, 12 per cent of people had used a bus recently, and 8 per cent of people did not have the option of using a car.

How bus services support people

The Scottish Household Survey 2021 , which is one of the data sources that contributes to the Scottish Transport Statistics , asked people who DID drive how difficult they thought doing day to day activities might be without a car. Unsurprisingly, many people thought it would be very difficult. Almost three-quarters (72 per cent) of people thought going to a supermarket without a car would be difficult, and 57 per cent said going to a GP would be difficult.

The stats show us that although the majority of people in Scotland have access to a car, many, especially in areas where there are no rail services are still reliant on the bus. Many of these people might be the most vulnerable in society.

We were curious about how those reliant on buses accessed essential services, as defined the Scottish Government’s list of key services , like banks and hospitals.

The  Scottish Access to Bus Indicator (SABI)  can help to set out some of this detail. It gives a score for the accessibility of bus services in each data zone (around 7,000 small areas in Scotland with roughly equal populations) and provides an objective measure of accessibility to public transport by bus in Scotland. The scores range from 1, for least accessible, to 10, for most accessible. This is based on routes, bus stops and timetables. It doesn’t, however, consider the extent to which people rely on buses to reach essential services, or the affordability of connections.

A case study

We started our research with a single town.

Selkirk, a former mill town in the Scottish Borders, situated on the A7 between Galashiels and Hawick. Its population of around 5,380 (including the Bannerfield estate) and its location makes it an accessible small town according to the urban rural classification. The town has had a falling population since the decline of the weaving industry in the 1980s and 1990s. As is the case in many rural areas, Selkirk train station closed to passengers in the early-1950s.

On the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD), Selkirk has a mixture of better off and worse off areas. The Bannerfield area, however, is one of the most deprived places in the Scottish Borders. For employment it ranks within the most deprived 10 per cent of Scotland, and for health, income, and crime it ranks within in the second most deprived areas of the country. The SIMD Indicators show what data is used to create these scores.

On the Scottish Access to Bus Indicator, the Bannerfield area scores a 3, where 1 is the lowest possible score and 10 is the highest.

Selkirk has some local services, including a GP surgery and schools, but it has no hospital or Jobcentre. The last bank branch in Selkirk closed in 2022 , and the only way to access face-to-face banking in town is a half hour visit from the RBS mobile bank on a Monday.

Both the nearest bank branch and Jobcentre are in Galashiels, five miles away, while the Borders General Hospital is 7 miles away.

We see here an example of an area where those who are worst off, with poor access to transport, are most reliant on buses to access essential services. Unless those people are eligible for concessionary travel, they will be paying £5.80 for each single (one-way) bus journey with Borders Buses they make to access those services (along with accessing employment out with the town).

Can bus affordability and reliance be mapped?

After building our first case study, we had hoped to replicate this in a more systematic and comprehensive way, to show towns and populations across Scotland which might be more reliant on bus services.

What we found is that this isn’t possible. There are some key data gaps. For instance, bus ticket prices are not systematically monitored, and especially not at any meaningful level of disaggregation.

We also considered narrowing down our search to most relevant locations (based on SIMD or SABI scores, for instance). However, again, there are some important data gaps that prevent us from doing this effectively, including the level of detail on access to services used in SIMD indicators.

Instead, we identified a geographically diverse sample of small towns without a rail connection. Then, we checked what key services are not available locally, and where the nearest ones are. Finally, we searched online for the ticket prices for these connections.

The towns that stood out were:

  • Newton Stewart, a remote small town in Dumfries and Galloway, has a population of 4,090 and mixed SIMD rankings by area, and SABI score of 4. It costs £7.20 for a Stagecoach day rider ticket to travel 43 miles to the Jobcentre and the Citizen Advice bureau in Dumfries, or to the hospital in Stranraer 26 miles away.
  • Banchory, an accessible small town in Aberdeenshire, has a population of 7,440 and has very low deprivation levels. The lowest-ranked SIMD area has a SABI score of 4. To travel the 19 miles to Aberdeen for the nearest hospital and Jobcentre it costs £8.60 for a Stagecoach day ticket.
  • By comparison, Portsoy is a remote rural area in Aberdeenshire with a population of 1,690. Roughly half of the population lives in an area that falls within the 4th most deprived in Scotland. With a SABI score of 1, it would cost someone £17.20 to travel 50 miles to the nearest hospital in Aberdeen, and £11.00 to the Citizen Advice bureau in Turriff, 16 miles away, both using different Stagecoach day tickets.
  • Inveraray, a very remote rural area in Argyll and Bute, has a population of just 570. It would cost someone £18.30 for a return journey to the jobcentre and hospital in Oban 37 miles away on the CityLink service, and £6.50 to travel the 25 miles to the bank, police station, Citizen Advice bureau, and library in Lochgilphead using a West Coast Motors day ticket. Inverary is a good example of where SIMD data is problematic because the population in the area is so low and dispersed, and it isn’t surprising that it has a SABI score of 1.

What our findings show

This analysis shows that remoteness, rurality, and low population are not necessarily the only indicators of poor bus accessibility, and that bus accessibility and affordability does not necessarily relate to deprivation.

Even using the same bus company doesn’t give any consistency – the Stagecoach operated journeys in our examples range from 8 pence per mile for a return trip from Newton Stewart to Dumfries, to 34 pence per mile to go from Portsoy to Turriff. At 82 pence per mile, the return trip from Selkirk to the nearest hospital is the most expensive of those we looked at, despite Selkirk being an ‘accessible small town’. For context, this is well above the HMRC mileage rate of 45 pence per mile for business-rated driving.

Policy context

It’s important to remember that not everyone will need to pay for their bus travel. The Scottish Government offers free travel for people over the age of 60, and on 31 January 2022, the new Young Persons’ Free Bus Travel Scheme was launched, which provides free bus travel for everyone living in Scotland between the ages of 5 and 21. Before the Young Persons’ scheme was introduced, those aged 16-18 and young volunteers aged 19-25 were also entitled to discounted bus and rail travel.

There are also UK-wide schemes which will apply to Scottish residents. For instance, people who are unemployed and get Jobseekers Allowance or Universal Credit may be able to apply for a Jobcentre Plus Travel Discount card, which gives users 50 per cent off some rail and bus travel.

There has been debate around the capping of bus fares in England , and calls to implement them in Scotland.

The Scottish Government’s response to this has been to highlight that its concessionary bus travel schemes are the most generous in the UK, with free travel for under-22s, over-60s, and people with disabilities. More than 2.3 million people are eligible for free bus travel. As of January 2023, the uptake rate of the Young Persons Scheme was 60.7 per cent, with 69.3 per cent of 12–15-year-olds being card holders, and 71.5 per cent of 16-21-year-olds having claimed their card.

The Under 26 Concessionary Fares Review (August 2022), included a useful overview of concession schemes across all modes of transport, and found that:

  • Concessionary fares schemes only provide value where they are matched with available services;
  • Concessionary fares schemes are not necessarily available to everyone who experiences cost as a barrier to transport; and that,
  • Lack of, and limited, transport services can result in increasing journey costs.

Public transport regulation

It’s interesting to compare the Scottish Government’s policy approach to bus services against other public transport modes:

  • In rail services, the Scottish Government took the decision to nationalise Scotrail from March 2022 and, under the grant agreement between the Scottish Government and ScotRail, fare rises – which take effect every January – are capped at the same rate as rises to the Retail Prices Index (RPI) from the previous July. As of the beginning of October 2023, the Scottish Government is trailing a six-month removal of peak rail fares. It also commissioned the Fair Fares review, which has been delayed but is due to report by the end of 2023.
  • The Scottish Government also contracts out and regulates ferry services. As of 2015, after several years of pilots, the road equivalent tariff was introduced across all services, meaning that island and remote mainland residents using ferries would pay no more than the equivalent cost of travelling the same distance by road. Fares have been frozen on the on the Northern Isles and Clyde & Hebrides ferry networks since January 2023 (currently until March 2024), and Government subsidised CalMac is currently trialling a scheme which gives islanders priority on booking car spaces on ferries.

By comparison, there is comparatively low regulation of buses beside the concession schemes . Transport Scotland sets the national policy framework on buses which is delivered by bus operators, local authorities, Regional Transport Partnerships, and the regulatory authorities. The majority of bus services in Scotland are operated on a commercial basis by private bus companies. Provided that an operator registers a service with the Office of the Traffic Commissioner they can operate any route they wish to any timetable. Local transport authorities can provide subsidy for services that are not provided on a commercial basis, but this is entirely up to the local authority.

More questions than answers?

As we said at the start of this blog, there are several questions this analysis raises, as well as some data gaps, and our research highlighted .directions that further analysis could explore. These include:

  • Exploring the uptake of concession schemes to understand the extent to which they are being used. Currently, data on concession schemes is not disaggregated to a level which might effectively show who might not be captured by schemes. For instance, for adults aged 60+ scheme sample sizes on ethnic minorities are too low to show uptake and use in these groups, and disability is not broken down to subcategories to allow a full understanding of accessibility needs. There is no such breakdown for the other concessionary schemes. It would also be useful to compare reach and uptake of bus concession schemes against those for other modes of transport.
  • Further mapping work to gain a more thorough picture of where in Scotland may not be just lacking in bus accessibility, but where people might also be most reliant on using buses to access essential services. This would include towns without rail connections, and areas where services exist, but are limited. At present, SIMD indicators consider people’s access to a GP, Post Office and Retail by public transport, but as our analysis has shown there are other essential services that people may be struggling to reach.
  • Understanding what role local authorities play – which ones are subsidising local services, which aren’t, and what impact might their decisions have?
  • Comparing the affordability of bus services to nationalised rail services, and to other modes of public transport regulated and subsidised by the Scottish Government.
  • Adding to analysis by exploring the equalities, environmental and economic impacts of low bus accessibility.
  • Looking into passenger numbers on local bus services, and precariousness of routes, particularly following changes to passenger numbers post-COVID.
  • Expanding the affordability analysis by looking at changes to bus fares, especially in comparison to inflation and regional wage growth. It would also be interesting to look at the affordability of buses in urban areas – cities may be better connected, but how prohibitive can the cost of a bus journey be in accessing some of the essential services explored here?

Wojtek Krakowiak and Ailsa Burn-Murdoch , Financial Scrutiny Unit, SPICe

Data notes:

Population figures are taken from NRS mid-2020 settlement estimates for residents of all ages .

Prices correct as of 2 November 2023, taken from operator websites.

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The national bus travel concession scheme for older and disabled persons (scotland) order 2006, you are here:.

  • Scottish Statutory Instruments
  • 2006 No. 107
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Introductory Text

1. Citation and commencement

2. Interpretation

3. The Scheme

4. Extent of the Scheme

5. Rate of travel concession

6. Conditions for operators

7. Operators to whom the Scheme applies

8. Admission to the Scheme

9. Compulsory participation notices

10. Exclusion from the Scheme

11. Information to be provided by operators

12. Reimbursement of operators

13. Payment of reimbursement

14. Verification

15. Travel cards

Explanatory Note

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concessionary travel scheme scotland

Edinburgh trams: Scottish Government refuses to fund free tram travel for under-22s

T he Scottish Government has ruled out funding free travel for under-22s on Edinburgh's trams as it published a long-awaited public transport review.

The Fair Fares Review was set up to make Scotland's public transport system more accessible, available, and affordable, with the costs of transport more fairly shared across government, business, and society. Its recommendations include developing proposals for a national integrated ticketing system and fare structure, as well as free rail travel for companions accompanying eligible blind people.

But although the review looked at a wide range of options, including free fares for under-22s on both Edinburgh trams and the Glasgow subway, the move was rejected. Explaining the rationale for the decision, the review said: "This option focuses support - £5m-£15m - within Edinburgh and Glasgow which have strong bus systems and so is not considered a good use of resources compared with other options as it would have a more marginal impact. In addition, Edinburgh Trams already provide concessionary travel to Edinburgh residents."

There had been high hopes that the Scottish Government would use the review to change its position on the question of free tram fares for under-22s. It excluded trams from the free fares scheme it introduced for under-22s on buses in January 2022, leaving Edinburgh to cover the cost of ensuring the concession applied on trams as well.

But later that year the council said it could no longer afford to continue the under-22s' free tram fares. There was unanimous cross-party support at the council for calling on the Scottish Government to fund the free tram travel, but there was no change of heart and the cost of the policy is currently being met by Edinburgh Trams.

Edinburgh transport convener Scott Arthur said the failure of the review to change policy meant Edinburgh was losing out. He said: "It is recommended that under-22s will get free inter-island foot passengers travel in the Western Isles, Orkney and Shetland, so it is incredible the same does not apply to tram travel in our Capital. Edinburgh is being shortchanged yet again.

"By not treating concessionary travel on bus and tram on an equal basis, it will only make it harder for Edinburgh to meet the Scottish Government’s own climate and traffic reduction targets. Edinburgh Trams currently covers the cost  of free U22 travel, and I feel that is neither sustainable nor acceptable.

"This decision comes on the back of the Scottish Government ‘pausing’ investment in bus priority measures – a monumental folly."

Cllr Arthur said he welcomed publication of the review, but was disappointed it was not making more progress towards "the fully integrated public transport system Scotland needs".

He said: "I welcome mention of a possible national and/or regional integrated ticket and fare structure, but we have to do more than ‘consider’  this if we are to tackle transport poverty in Scotland. At the core of this has to be making bus travel more affordable and reliable across Scotland, coupled with excellent integration with rail.  

"I am delighted, however,  to see that extending free travel on rail services for companions accompanying eligible Blind Persons Concessionary Travel cardholders is being considered, as I know Sight Scotland has campaigned on this point for some time." 

Edinburgh trams: Scottish Government refuses to fund free tram travel for under-22s

concessionary travel scheme scotland

"Not only will it make public transport more affordable for elderly and disabled residents, but it will make the town centre a busier and more accessible location. With the Riverhead centre nearing completion and the new Community Diagnostics Centre under construction, there are numerous benefits to the scheme, helping passengers to access heath appointments, work, training or education and leisure opportunities."

Riverhead Square has been undergoing a £3.3m makeover . The new Community Diagnostics Centre will open later this summer in Freshney Place shopping centre.

Matt Cranwell, managing director at Stagecoach East Midlands, said: "We are pleased to work with North East Lincolnshire Council through our Bus Service Improvement Plan to expand the hours of free travel for local concessionary pass holders.

"Being able to use bus passes before 0930hrs on weekdays as well as weekends will give people greater travel flexibility especially when booking GP and hospital appointments. Buses provide vital transport connections for our communities and help improve the independence, health and well-being of our older customers."

When travelling on public transport outside of North East Lincolnshire - for example, a journey commencing in Hull - with a concessionary bus pass, as a general rule the council advises to expect the free travel time to be only from 9.30am on weekdays.

Neighbouring North Lincolnshire Council has already run an all day free travel scheme for its concessionary pass holders . It renewed the £1.8m scheme this year, and more than 23,000 of its local residents are eligible.

For more information and to apply for a North East Lincolnshire concessionary pass, visit here .

For more information on how to apply in North Lincolnshire, visit here .

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Young Persons' Concessionary Travel Scheme

Information request and response under the Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act 2002.

Information requested

You asked for the most recently held figures concerning the young persons' concessionary travel scheme, by local authority area. 

I can confirm that the figures you provided in Annex 1, copied below, are correct and the most recently held. I would confirm that these figures are correct as at close of business on 28 February 2023. This information is not routinely published on the Transport Scotland or Scottish Government websites 

The Scottish Government is committed to publishing all information released in response to Freedom of Information requests. View all FOI responses at http://www.gov.scot/foi-responses .

Please quote the FOI reference Central Enquiry Unit Email: [email protected] Phone: 0300 244 4000

The Scottish Government St Andrews House Regent Road Edinburgh EH1 3DG

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IMAGES

  1. New Concessionary Passes

    concessionary travel scheme scotland

  2. Guidance for travel concession authorities on the England national concessionary travel scheme

    concessionary travel scheme scotland

  3. Strathclyde Partnership for Transport and Strathclyde Concessionary Travel Scheme Joint

    concessionary travel scheme scotland

  4. Strathclyde Partnership for Transport and Strathclyde Concessionary Travel Scheme Joint

    concessionary travel scheme scotland

  5. Strathclyde Partnership for Transport and Strathclyde Concessionary Travel Scheme Joint

    concessionary travel scheme scotland

  6. Concessionary Passes

    concessionary travel scheme scotland

COMMENTS

  1. A Guide to Concessionary Travel

    More than 100 million free bus journeys have been made since the Scottish Government introduced free bus travel for under 22s. Our concessionary travel schemes make getting about easier and cheaper for people in Scotland. And by making more sustainable travel choices easier to access, we can help to tackle the climate emergency as well.

  2. getyournec.scot

    Young Persons' Free Bus Travel Scheme. You will need a new or replacement card before hopping on board. ... If you're aged 12-59 and want a National Entitlement Card without free bus travel. Apply now. 60+ Concessionary Travel. You can apply 2 weeks before your 60th birthday! Apply now. Disabled Concessionary Travel. Find out if you are ...

  3. National Entitlement Card

    In Scotland, all people with a disability, and those aged 60 and over are entitled to a National Entitlement Card. Depending on people's circumstances, and the region in which they live, this Entitlement Card can give access to a concessionary fare, or free train travel. Concessionary travel passes and schemes are managed by local councils ...

  4. Apply for an under 22s bus pass

    Young people aged 5 to 21, who live in Scotland for at least 6 months a year, can apply for a free bus pass. You can use this to travel on most bus services in Scotland for free. Your Young Scot Card (Young Scot NEC) or other National Entitlement Card (NEC) will be your bus pass. You can either: update your existing Young Scot Card or other NEC.

  5. PDF The National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Young Persons (Scotland

    Concessionary Travel Scheme for Young Persons aged 18 and under (Young Persons Scheme). The Young Persons Scheme will provide free bus travel, on eligible services, to all people of fare-paying age under the age of 19 who are resident in Scotland who have applied for and present a valid travel card under the scheme to undertake an eligible journey.

  6. Free bus pass scheme costs and uptake: FOI release

    Between 31 January 2022 and 3 February 2023 the Scottish Government spent £102,378,600.88 on the Young Persons' Free Bus Travel Scheme. This is broken down in to £97,166,918.69 of operator reimbursements costs and £5,211,682.19 of operational set-up and maintenance costs. 2. The Young Persons' Free Bus Travel Scheme is the first of its ...

  7. The National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Young Persons (Scotland

    This Order is made under sections 40(1), (3), (4), (7) and 52(4) of the Transport (Scotland) Act 2005 (asp 12) which enables the Scottish Ministers to make national travel concession schemes. This Order makes provision for a National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Young Persons ("the scheme"). The Order comes into force on 1 April, meaning that Ministers will be able to formally admit ...

  8. 60+ Concessionary Bus Travel

    If you are over 60 you could be eligible for free bus travel to get around Scotland and your local area, accessed via the National Entitlement Card. The scheme provides free travel on most registered local and long-distance bus services throughout Scotland, at any time of day for any number of journeys, for those aged 60 and over. For more information on the scheme, please visit the Transport ...

  9. Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee Report on The National Bus

    A report by the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee on a Subordinate Legislation - The National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Young Persons (Scotland) Amendment Order 2021 ... Energy and Transport Committee Report on The National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Young Persons (Scotland) Amendment Order 2021. SHARE. PDF Published: Monday ...

  10. How to apply for or renew your National Entitlement Card

    How to apply for or renew your National Entitlement Card. You can use getyournec.scot to apply for, renew and request a replacement National Entitlement Card (NEC). If you cannot submit your request online, please select from the menu if you are enquiring about a 60+ or disabled NEC, or the Young Persons' Free Bus Travel NEC for those under 22.

  11. Extending the concessionary travel scheme

    "The concessionary travel scheme enables independence, accessibility and social inclusivity. ... "At a time when we are investing and encouraging more people to use Scotland's many excellent bus services, this government will do all it can to ensure as many people as possible consider the many benefits of bus travel. The £250m we spend ...

  12. Concessions

    The card gives holders free bus travel in Scotland and, through the Strathclyde Concessionary Travel Scheme, reduced fares on trains and Subway in the Strathclyde area. If you live on an island or peninsula within Strathclyde you can also receive reduced ferry fares with a Strathclyde Concessionary Travel Ferry Card.

  13. Consultation on Free Bus Travel for Older and Disabled People and

    The Scottish Government is launching this Consultation to seek your views on the concessionary travel scheme for older and disabled people ("the Scheme"). ... Over 1.3 million bus pass holders benefit from the Scotland-wide free bus travel scheme for older and disabled people. They make around 145 million bus journeys each year representing ...

  14. Operating costs for Young Person's Free Bus Travel scheme: FOI release

    What have been the costs for Transport Scotland to raise awareness, market, and promote the Young Person's (Under 22) Free Bus Travel scheme in each financial year, since its introduction? Between 31 January 2022 and 31 March 2022 the Scottish Government spent £766,347.01 on marketing costs for the Young Persons' Free Bus Travel Scheme.

  15. The National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Young Persons (Scotland

    The regulations increase the age range for the new National Concessionary Bus Travel Scheme for Young Persons so that it is open to people aged 21 and under. The new scheme is scheduled to start operating for travel for people aged 21 and under on 31 January 2022. ... View Concessionary Travel - Under 22s Fairer Scotland Duty Assessment Results;

  16. Bus accessibility, affordability, and reliance across Scotland

    Almost two fifths of these journeys were made under the National Concessionary Travel Scheme. There were 1.5 million people with National Concessionary Travel cards in Scotland in 2022, which mostly focus on providing free travel for under-22s, over-60s, and people with disabilities.

  17. The National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Older and Disabled

    Travel cards. This Order makes provision for a National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Older and Disabled Persons ("the Scheme") to come into force on 1st April 2006. This Order is made under section 40 of the Transport (Scotland) Act 2005 (asp 12) which allows the Scottish Ministers to make national travel concession schemes.

  18. Details of National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Older and Disabled

    This funding comprised of concessionary travel reimbursement claims of around £208.3m and £7.2m for the COVID- 19 Support Grant (CSG) for the month of March 2020. For awareness, the CSG was introduced to bus operators at the beginning of the pandemic with the purpose of sustaining concessionary travel reimbursement at the levels prior to COVID.

  19. PDF The National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Young Persons (Scotland

    This instrument amends the National Bus Travel Concession Scheme for Young Persons (Scotland) Order 2021 No.175 to extend the eligibility provisions of the Order to include 19-21 year olds. It also amends the reimbursement terms for bus operators carrying concessionary passengers under the Young Persons Scheme, establishing a rate of 43.6% of the

  20. Edinburgh trams: Scottish Government refuses to fund free tram travel

    The Scottish Government has ruled out funding free travel for under-22s on Edinburgh's trams as it published a long-awaited public transport review. The Fair Fares Review was set up to make ...

  21. Free early morning bus travel for elderly and disabled in Grimsby to

    In February, Grimsby Live broke the news that there was £60,000 spare cash from BSIP funding that the council wanted to explore using to expand the free travel time to early morning. "This is a fantastic scheme for those with concessionary bus passes," said Cllr Stewart Swinburn, portfolio holder for housing, infrastructure and transport.

  22. Young Persons' Concessionary Travel Scheme

    You asked for the most recently held figures concerning the young persons' concessionary travel scheme, by local authority area. Response. I can confirm that the figures you provided in Annex 1, copied below, are correct and the most recently held. I would confirm that these figures are correct as at close of business on 28 February 2023.