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Indian Railways to charge fees for excess luggage

With numerous complaints about excess baggage being carried into train compartments being filed, the Indian Railways has decided to strictly enforce its baggage allowance rules. As per the rules, passengers will have to pay up to six times the stipulated amount as penalty if caught travelling with luggage above the allotted limit, an official told Hindustan Times on Tuesday.

According to the rules, a sleeper class and a second class passenger can carry luggage weighing 40 kg and 35 kg respectively without paying any extra money and a maximum of 80 kg and 70 kg respectively by paying for excess luggage at the parcel office. It’s clearly mentioned that the excess luggage would have to be put in the luggage van.

“The rules were already in place, we are just enforcing them strictly now. Passengers are allowed to book and carry excess luggage in the luggage van, up to the maximum limit, on the payment of a fee equivalent to one-and-a-half times the luggage rate.

“If a passenger is found travelling with un-booked luggage weighing more than the free allowance, the excess weight will be charged six times the luggage rate. The move is to ensure passenger convenience and address the issue of cramped compartments,” Ved Prakash, Director, Information and Publicity, Railway Board, told the newspaper.

Officials also added that unlike at the airports, where the luggage of each passenger is weighed, the railways will carry out random checks among the passengers.

Similarly, an AC first class passenger can carry 70 kg of luggage for free and a maximum of 150 kg, after paying a fee for the excess 80 kg.

An AC two-tier passenger can carry 50 kg of luggage for free and a maximum of 100 kg by paying a fee for the excess 50 kg.

The railways will also ensure that trunks, suitcases and boxes adhere to the prescribed measurements of 100cm x 60cm x 25cm (length, breadth, height) for personal luggage to be carried in the compartments.

If the trunks, suitcases and boxes exceed any one of the dimensions, those would have to be booked and carried in the luggage van, Prakash added.

The national transporter had also launched a special drive across all its zones to enforce the rules from June 1-6.

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