I'm disappointed to see that National Rail Inquiries - that is, the 'official' railway ticket retailer in the UK, operated by the Rail Delivery Group - has started adding automatic redirects to Booking.com when you search for a itinerary. My complaint isn't so much about their use of this hotel reservations intermediary in particular; I'm a customer myself and they're actually somewhat reasonable to customers (their anti-competitive business practices notwithstanding). This is why I'm not happy:

  • silently redirecting users to other sites and opening extra tabs is confusing to all but the most tech-savvy users
  • there's no option for users to turn this off for good
  • it's already a slow and resource-heavy website, and yet is exactly the thing which many users may be using in a hurry and on patchy mobile connections - now, it wants to open up another tab containing loads of images on every query
  • this change further entrenches an existing near-monopoly, when this could have been a way of supporting independent hotels and keeping public money in the UK economy

My suggestion is to use TrainSplit instead, who actually know how to make a user-friendly website (I am not affiliated with them nor am I paid for saying this).

#ukrail #railticketing

Booking.com - Wikipedia

@seabass People can use their local train company website instead. They serve uk destinations outside their own area.
@annehargreaves Indeed! But that reminds me of another retrograde step on the National Rail Enquiries: you used up be able to select which train operating company you wanted to purchase the ticket from, but a year or two they changed it to always redirect to the company that has the franchise for the main (or perhaps first?) leg of the journey. No wonder so many passengers believe they need 10+ user accounts with each of the companies!
@seabass How annoying of them. I've never used them. I always use my local one.