Waiting for Waiting Lists to Go Away
In
November 2023, Indian Railways (IR) boldly proclaimed itself the “most safe and
affordable mode of transport” and pledged to eliminate passenger waitlists by
2027. Just a month later, it announced an even more ambitious plan: a ₹1 lakh
crore investment to procure 7,000–8,000 new train sets over the next 15 years,
part of a broader ₹4.2 lakh crore infrastructure overhaul. This included
multi-tracking seven high-density corridors, completing the Eastern and Western
Dedicated Freight Corridors (DFCs), and adding 5,500–6,000 km of new tracks in
FY25.
IR also projected a surge in annual passenger numbers from
800 crore to 1,000 crore and proposed 3,000 new trains—alongside the massive
infrastructure upgrade—to be delivered within just 4 to 5 years. This longer
timeline, endorsed as the Prime Minister’s guarantee, effectively contradicted
the original 2027 deadline, suggesting that the earlier figure may have been
floated without serious deliberation.
Yet, apart from a controversial
plan to increase the production of non-AC coaches—by scaling back on new AC
coaches, a move many view as backward-looking—there has been little visible
progress.
In the meantime, IR continued with
a flurry of announcements recently: fare hikes, a revised promise to introduce
1,000 new trains over five years (a steep drop from the earlier pledge of
3,000), and new rules on waiting lists and reservations. The pattern of walking
back on grand declarations without revisiting the original plan is increasingly
hard to ignore.
IR proudly prints on every ticket
that passengers receive a 55% concession. But what exactly is this meant to
convey? That since the service is subsidized, passengers should simply accept
overcrowding, delays, and poor facilities without expecting meaningful
improvements? If that is the implied message, it risks sounding more like a
disclaimer than a commitment to service itself, let alone quality.
There is no reason IR’s passenger
segment must be inherently loss-making. With India’s massive population, a vast
and dense railway network, and a deeply embedded culture as well as necessity of
rail travel, IR has the unique potential to deliver better services while
steadily moving toward financial sustainability—with or without central subsidies—if
backed by coherent planning and accountability.
In that context, the recent fare
hike is both politically bold and fiscally underwhelming. While it is
commendable that IR moved at all—despite fare hikes being deeply unpopular—the
timid scale of the revision undermines its significance. The projected
additional revenue of ₹600–700 crore annually amounts to just 1% of IR’s
₹80,000 crore earnings. It is a symbolic gesture—akin to boiling the ocean with
fanfare only to recover a few tepid drops.
IR defines
its core business as inter-city and long-distance travel for a long time. And
yet, for years, it has operated like a hyperactive multitasker—trying to be
everything to everyone, everywhere. The result? A network increasingly clogged by
suburban and short-distance commuter trains, many of which run under 70 km on
average and are about as aligned with IR’s core mandate as a bicycle lane is
with a national highway. These short-haul services are invariably deeply
loss-making and operationally out of sync with the long-distance focus that IR
claims to champion. They drain capacity, dilute efficiency, and leave the
system stretched thinner than a pantry car’s coffee.
What is needed is a healthy dose of structural clarity. A
pragmatic step would be to hive off suburban and short-distance services into
separate PSUs—albeit in partnership with state and city governments—on the
lines of India’s successful Metro rail models. At the very least, states and
cities must start paying their share of both capital and operational expenses.
Because without a rational framework, IR will remain what it increasingly
resembles: an overburdened beast hauling every passenger, every distance, with
no regard for strategy, sustainability, or sanity.
If not all commuter trains,
suburban services have to be left to the states and cities. IR continues to
bleed money on these routes, with Mumbai being the starkest case. Yet, it
repeats its mistakes, like piloting Bengaluru's commuter rail project. Such
services should be handled by separate entities with independent finances, but
in partnership of IR as it would continue to own the fixed infrastructure.
Long-distance
train services like Shatabdi, Tejas, Vande Bharat, Rajdhani, Gareeb Rath, and
Duranto must be expanded, modernised, and backed by serious upgrades in
infrastructure, maintenance, and both pre-boarding and on-board facilities. But
this is conditional on one important issue: resisting the new national fad of
flagging off Vande Bharat trains without so much as a basic check on likely
patronage. Running gleaming trains with empty seats may look good in photo ops,
but every such service must actually carry passengers—not just political
mileage.
Now, for a class-wise reality check. Passengers in AC1,
Executive Chair Car, and AC II, largely, are not choosing trains because they
are cheaper than flying—they are doing so them for comfort and convenience.
Subsidising these premium categories makes about as much sense as offering
discounts at in-demand luxury hotels. Fares here should carry a profit margin,
plain and simple. These services can and should be upgraded—perhaps even
through a reboot of the abandoned private train experiment, which derailed more
due to poor conception and tendering than any lack of potential. The rising
middle class does not mind paying—so long as the service does not feel like a 1970s
throwback with curtains and dust.
AC III and
AC Chair Car are among the few categories that are at least marginally
profitable—and should be prime candidates for expansion. Naturally, IR chose to
do the opposite. After incessant complaints about a reduction in non-AC
coaches, and passengers encroaching in AC coaches, it scaled down AC coach
production and ramped up the manufacturing of non-AC ones. The move not only
runs counter to any reasonable idea of modernization, but also completely
overlooks the growing demand for affordable, air-conditioned travel. And to make
matters worse, these bare bone non-AC coaches are built to last 36 years—a long
and uncomfortable legacy for a country aspiring to join the developed world by
2047. We are not just locking in discomfort; we are institutionalizing it.
A far
better solution is hiding in plain sight: introduce AC seater coaches with 100 Plus,
cramped but far more comfortable than non-AC coaches, priced well below AC III.
With sensible tools like on-board monitoring and rationalized rake maintenance,
running costs can be trimmed. This would nudge a good number of non-AC
travellers toward a more comfortable option—while also trimming IR’s losses. Even
Vande Bharat trains can—and should—include such coaches. Not only would they
serve a wider passenger base, but they might actually make these fancy new
trains more valuable for everyone, rather than just photogenic for public at large.
There is,
of course, the ever-persistent question of poor travellers—particularly hordes
of migrants—who have no choice but to travel like cattle in unreserved coaches,
packed like sardines, often without elbow room and sometimes even huddled in
toilets. It is the kind of “rail experience” no marketing brochure mentions. IR,
which loves to tout its social responsibility, must extend it to the most
vulnerable meaningfully. Dignity cannot be optional. A practical starting
point? Run one or two dedicated 24-coach non-AC trains on major routes,
ensuring every traveller gets a seat and no one has to spend hours standing or
squatting in whatever space there is in a coach.
Some fixes are at once simple: simple solution to a
seemingly complex problem. Begin with the basics: extend all well-patronized
trains to 24 coaches, use analytics to eliminate pointless stoppages, and
deploy smart operational and engineering tweaks to raise average speeds to a
respectable 80–100 kmph. In parallel, ramp up the supporting infrastructure:
more tracks, more platforms, more trains—and fewer excuses.
The DFCs have absorbed massive investments, far in excess
of what was envisaged, and with their being nearly complete (save for the final
JNPT stretch), tangible outcomes are elusive. The real test: do they actually
free up capacity and improve passenger train speeds and if not, why is that so?
This needs to be studied thoroughly before investing in more freight corridors.
Another issue: Delhi–Mumbai corridor, with
its higher structural headroom, is ideal for reviving the double-decker
concept—this time with coach designs that do not feel like climbing into a
toaster.
And then, of course, there is the mother of all promises:
eliminating waiting lists. More than 18 months have passed since the bold
declarations of 2023. So far, the “no waitlist” dream is beginning to resemble
a pipe dream—and just PR is not going to cut much ice.
Nevertheless,
in April, IR decided to get creative and capped the Waiting List at 25% of a
class’s capacity, reasoning that less than a quarter of waitlisted passengers
eventually get confirmed berths anyway. The logic? If they are unlikely to get
seats, why let them hope in the first place. Unsurprisingly, experts tore into
the move, calling it impractical, uneconomical, and deeply inconvenient. After
all, the Waiting List is not just a queue—it is a valuable signal of demand,
crucial for planning special trains. By June, IR quietly walked back the
decision: the cap was raised to 60% for AC classes and 30% for non-AC. So much
for decisive planning.
While IR claimed this dramatic
U-turn was “data-driven,” the quick reversal suggests it was more instinct than
insight. In an age of AI and real-time analytics, why not tailor Waiting List
caps to individual trains based on actual occupancy trends? That has the promise of optimizing both convenience
and occupancy. It is not rocket science—unless you are doing
it with steam-driven computers.
IR must also embrace dynamic pricing in a more professional
manner than done so far. Airlines have been doing it for years with decent
success. Yet IR’s version has had the flair of a half-cooked paratha. It needs
a route-specific, AI-powered system that maximizes revenue without
scaring away passengers. A pilot model could mirror airline bookings: confirmed
seats only, steep cancellation charges, and last-minute Tatkal allocation. It
is not just about money—which would flow in for
sure— it helps passengers plan, or at least hope, with a little more certainty.
Meanwhile, Bikaner saw a trial where waitlisted status
would freeze 24 hours before departure, up from the existing four, supposedly
to reduce last-minute anxiety. Not to be outdone by themselves, IR then
announced chart preparation 8 hours ahead of departure—because what is better
than one half-measure? Two, of course. While the intent—passenger certainty—is
noble and even desirable, it will not solve the actual problem. A recent report
revealed that over 3.27 crore waitlisted passengers could not travel at all in
2024–25. That is not uncertainty. That is a system on overload.
One bright
spot: IR and IRCTC have finally done some heavy lifting on the digital
ticketing front—and the upgrades are not just cosmetic. The revamped system now
uses advanced anti-bot technology and a top-tier Content Delivery Network to
block those lightning-fast auto-bookings by rogue agents whose clever
manipulations made them possess reflexes faster than Olympic sprinters. As a
result, 2.5 crore suspicious user IDs have already been deactivated. Aadhaar is
now mandatory for Tatkal bookings, putting a solid speed bump in the path of
misuse.
While the
full impact of the measures already undertaken remains to be seen, one thing is
clear: it is time IR stops making announcements and actually starts acting with
a view to improving passenger experience. Waitlists may not be disappearing tomorrow—or even in the next 4 or 5 years—but strong positive action must be
predicated on more than a fighting chance that they might shrink, rather than
just headline IR’s next press release.
No one, not the least this armchair consultant, is claiming there is a silver bullet to fix the waiting list mess. But if IR genuinely commits to the cause and follows through on these and other sensible measures, the tyranny of the waitlist can, in time, be brought to its knees. Confirmed accommodation on demand does not have to be a fantasy—it could actually become the norm.
On the
other hand, if things continue the way they are, one would obviously despair like
the Bard’s Macbeth, “…Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow, Creeps in
this petty pace from day to day To the last syllable of recorded time…”.
…
Excellent article. Is anyone in the ivory towers even bothered?Perhaps hydrogen powered trains and hyperloop will solve the problems.
ReplyDeleteThanks sir, yes, they may even hope so
Delete1AC coaches can accommodate only 24 members and In many trains its occupancy is not much. India is most populated country and in most of the trains it must be discarded.
DeleteIR is on the verge of breakout and half hearted measures are passe. Need of the hour is to address the criticality and passenger experience after all most loveable connections can be developed over train journeys.
ReplyDeleteSure, I agree. Thanks
Delete💐 Good Morning sir 🙏🏼 Thanks for Your Great Information Sir
ReplyDeleteWelcome
DeleteA powerful, data-backed reality check by Sudhanshu Mani Sir! Sharp, insightful, and brutally honest—this blog exposes the widening gap between Indian Railways' grand promises and ground realities. A must-read for anyone who truly wants to see IR reform with purpose, not just headlines.
ReplyDeleteYou covered many things in one blog, all relevant ofcourse.
ReplyDeletePassenger Business needs a separate multidisciplinary team at the Board and maybe some of the important zones. Unlike freight business, which needs a totally different approach , Passenger Business and Earnings are waiting at your doorstep and can be maximised by opportunistic actions on a day to day basis, and a lot of strategic thinking.
What should be the natural response to unmet demand in any sector - opportunistic and flexible pricing. Why should there be a subsidy in an area of high, unmet demand? And why be apologetic about it?
I wrote on the subject sometime back with the title 'Proud to be Unprofitable'
ReplyDeleteYou’ve captured the gap between promises and ground realities with clarity and wit.👏
ReplyDeleteEasily the best article on this subject. I particularly liked the lines- " Running gleaming trains with empty seats may look good in photo ops, but every such service must actually carry passengers—not just political mileage."
ReplyDeleteYou have covered many things in your blog. Specifically, w r t passenger trains, you have not mentioned double deckers which, I suspect, are profitable. They may a good way to travel, though I don't know the occupancy rates of these trains. A t least in the BLR Chennai and Coimbatore Bangalore/ Chennai routes, they seem to be fully occupied. But whether they can substitute for non AC long distance trains is doubtful.
ReplyDeleteReg suburban trains, it looks like they have a great political presence, with low fares and prime time services. I don't know whether, if hived off to independent entities (like Metros), the problem can be solved. It may be possible to strike at a fare structure that won't pinch the commuters too m=much and yet produce at least a moderate profit.
I don't see trains without waiting lists in the foreseeable future, at least some trains at some months. But the recent decision to issue tickets only two months in advance seems to be another move that has not helped anyone.
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ReplyDeleteVery informative with a deep critical analysis backed by facts, not rhetoric. Amazing, as always Sir
ReplyDeleteVery strategic and yet practical suggestions. Hoping some of them get picked. It’s high time both the platforms and trains became more professional.
ReplyDeleteOnly when you decide that the system in IR is professionally driven or politically driven , can you get the correct answers. As long as the he decision to run additional trains like VB , only for political mileage and not based on data, will continue, I don't think there's much hope. Earlier there was perhaps some competition for AC Frist classes from the Air traffic, now with Roads infrastructure being modernized, I doubt if the passenger services can come close to being profitable
ReplyDelete