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Press release

£33.4 million to fund new gateline improvements

New ticket gates at railway stations will help crack down on fare dodging, while reinvesting millions into better rail services across England.

  • new ticket gates for stations across England with £33 million to crack down on fare evasion and deliver a fairer railway
  • funding to tackle deliberate fare evasion to recover up to £400 million lost annually and reinvest in better journeys for passengers
  • passengers already seeing the benefits of a simpler and fairer ticketing system ahead of the creation of Great British Railways with expanded Pay As You Go and digital ticketing trials

As part of the government’s landmark rail reforms, new ticket gates will be installed at stations and platforms across England, targeting fare dodger hot spots to crack down on deliberate ticketless travel and make sure fares go towards improving the services passengers depend on.

Passengers will benefit from a fairer railway with £33.4 million of funding to support the rollout of a range of gate types at stations which currently have none, including new taller gates to prevent barrier jumping and more of the standard waist-high gates currently used across Great Britain and on the London Underground.

Fare evasion puts up to £400 million of rail revenue at risk each year and every pound lost to fare dodging is one that can’t be spent on improving services – whether maintaining the network, upgrading carriages, or improving wifi. These new gates will help protect revenue and put it back to work where it belongs: delivering better journeys for passengers.

Great British Railways (GBR) will be focused on creating a fairer deal for passengers, including tackling fare evasion and simplifying the complex web of ticketing to deliver more reliable and affordable services. Changes are already underway with the expansion of contactless Pay As You Go technology, digital ticketing trials across the East Midlands and South Yorkshire and the incoming GBR app, where passengers will be able to buy tickets, check train times and access a range of support all in one place.

The Rail Minister, Lord Peter Hendy, said:

Fare evasion is not a victimless crime – it undermines confidence in the railway and means passengers lose out on millions in revenue, which should be invested to improve services for everyone.

By stopping fare dodgers before they reach the platform, we’re protecting taxpayer cash, supporting investment in the network and ensuring the railway works better for the millions of passengers who do the right thing every day by paying their way.

As we deliver significant reform across our railways in the lead-up to Great British Railways, we are creating a truly joined-up railway, which is more accountable and better equipped to deliver the reliable, modern railway passengers deserve, to create jobs, growth and homes.

The new ticket gates will have passengers in mind with options to scan digital tickets, insert paper tickets or ‘tap out’ where contactless travel is available and follow wider changes coming in across the railway to improve ticketing and stop fraud. Earlier this year, the government announced that under Great British Railways, passengers will be able to claim Delay Repay directly from wherever they buy their ticket, making it quicker and easier to apply for compensation.

Operators allocated funding to support the delivery of new gates include:

  • Avanti West Coast: Stafford, Liverpool Lime Street
  • East Midlands Railway: Market Harborough
  • Greater Anglia: Witham, Rayleigh, Ware, Hertford East and Manningtree
  • Thameslink Southern Great Northern: Royston, Stevenage, Elephant and Castle, Worthing and Gipsy Hill
  • TransPennine Express: Manchester Piccadilly
  • West Midlands Trains: Tamworth, Nuneaton, Worcester Foregate Street and Worcester Shrub Hill

This is the first stage of a wider programme to increase the number of ticket gates in use across England, with the potential for further rollout across the UK in the future. Delivery of the new ticket gates is expected by mid-2028, with the first phase of rollout in place during the first half of 2027.

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Published 15 July 2026