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girl on bus via Shutterstock

Leap card fares are going to get cheaper for teenagers aged 18 and under

The child fare rate is being extended from August.

THE CHILD FARE rate for the Leap card will now be extended to 16, 17 and 18 year olds from this August.

Usually 16 is the cut off age for child fares and when adult fare prices kick in.

The National Transport Authority announced the changes today.

Free public transport for the very young will also be extended by a year across Dublin Bus, Irish Rail, Luas and Bus Éireann.

From August the Leap Child Card can be bought without formal registration for anyone under 15 years of age.

Meanwhile 16 to 18 year olds can apply online at www.leapcard.ie for a personalised Leap Card.

The personalised Leap card will mean they can avail of child fares at all times.

Ministers for Transport Leo Varadkar said:

The aim of this new fare structure is to encourage more young people and families to use public transport to get to school and throughout their lives.

Gerry Murphy, CEO of the National Transport Authority said, “While secondary schools are finishing up for their summer holidays this week, some of the older students – the 16, 17 and 18-year-olds who are returning in the autumn – can look forward to cheaper public transport fares from the beginning of the next school year”.

Public transport fares have risen consistently in the last number of years.

Dublin Bus cash fares rose by 10 per cent in the last price hike last December, however leap fares increased by just 2 per cent.

Irish Rail prices jumped between 2 and 9 per cent.

Bus Éireann prices increased between 4 and 6 per cent.

And there was a 4-8 per cent increase in Luas fares.

Read: Reduced fares, like: Leap Card comes to bus services in Cork>

Read: Leap Card users will pay no more than €10 a day>

Read: Train, bus and Luas fares increase>

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44 Comments
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    Mute sleepy joe
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    Dec 27th 2023, 3:25 PM

    Keep your jabs

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    Mute Tezmond McVicar
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    Dec 27th 2023, 3:37 PM

    @sleepy joe: They’re not jabs. If you’d bothered to wake from your sleep and read the article you’d know that.

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    Mute D Farrell
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    Dec 27th 2023, 1:23 PM

    If some of the parents, pointlessly commenting on FF v SF v FG politics here, instead brought their children to the free flu vaccine clinics today (or tomorrow), the HSE would be better able to cope with unavoidable accidents.

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    Mute bruce banner
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    Dec 27th 2023, 1:14 PM

    So… Upping the chance to spread covid just to use up surplus flu jabs.. Seems counter productive.

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    Mute John Mcmahon
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    Dec 27th 2023, 12:58 PM

    Could the journal post the list please
    Or a link even?

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    Mute John Mcmahon
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    Dec 27th 2023, 1:01 PM

    @John Mcmahon: found it thanks

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    Mute Wombleman
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    Dec 27th 2023, 5:50 PM

    I wonder if we would be allowed have a referendum on restricting some peoples access to the internet?

    If you answer ‘yes’ to any of the usual conspiracy nonsense then you are officially blocked and barred from any kind of internet access – this will help you by not allowing you to be hoodwinked into believing any other utter rubbish and it will help society by preventing you from spreading your tripe.

    Before anyone says I’m being a fascist etc I’m proposing a fair referendum where the will of the people decide the outcome – if the looneys win then I’ll accept that I live in a country of looneys (I really doubt they will though, thanks be to God!!)

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