The Free Travel Scheme was introduced in 1967 to promote social inclusion and prevent the isolation of elderly and disabled people by taking advantage of free space on public transport services.
The Free Travel Scheme is available to all persons aged over 66 and those under age 66 on certain qualified payments, who are living legally and permanently in the State. The scheme permits those who are eligible to travel for free on most CIÉ public transport services, Local Link, LUAS and a range of transport services offered by some 74 private operators countrywide.
Below is a table of free travel budget allocation and recipient numbers, by year, from 2010 to 2022.
At year end
|
Budget Allocation in € millions
|
Number of Free Travel primary recipients
|
2010
|
77
|
699,164
|
2011
|
77
|
726,412
|
2012
|
77
|
754,731
|
2013
|
77
|
782,529
|
2014
|
77
|
812,892
|
2015
|
77
|
842,724
|
2016
|
77
|
873,454
|
2017
|
80
|
902,513
|
2018
|
90
|
934,298
|
2019
|
95
|
966,206
|
2020
|
95
|
*999,007
|
2021
|
95
|
1,022,001
|
2022
|
95
|
1,054,840
|
* This figure includes circa 51,000 recipients whose Free Travel had stopped on the Department's systems in 2020, due to a technical issue which was resolved in 2021. No loss of entitlement occurred, as these customers were at all times eligible to access Free Travel on public transport services.
I trust this clarifies the position for the Deputy.