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 Ugh, that sounds very much like how local concert venues have all their ticket purchasing go through LiveNation or Ticketmaster rather than direct these days. Bleh, I don't like it.
@maddy Yeah, it's always depressing to get to the checkout page to discover that you've got a whole load of surprise 'booking fees' added to the subtotal. https://pretix.eu/ is pretty cool; I wish more venues would use it instead of these big anti-competitive platforms.
pretix – Reinventing ticket sales for conferences, exhibitions, museums, ...

pretix helps you to sell tickets for your event in an easy way. It supports multi-lingual events and provides a wide range of features