Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 5th February 2026, 10:07 AM
Bangladesh Railway has reported a significant enforcement drive against fare evasion, identifying thousands of passengers travelling without valid tickets in a single day and recovering more than one million taka in combined fares and fines. The coordinated operation, conducted across both the eastern and western railway zones on 4 February, covered 149 trains and involved 206 travelling ticket examiners (TTEs). Officials said the initiative formed part of a broader effort to curb revenue leakage, ease pressure on overcrowded services and reinforce compliance with ticketing rules.
According to the official disclosure issued on Thursday, inspection teams boarded intercity, mail and commuter services operating on major corridors as well as secondary routes. During these checks, 5,220 passengers were found to be travelling without valid tickets or with tickets that did not match their journeys. In line with existing regulations, passengers were required to pay the applicable fare along with a statutory penalty. As a result, Bangladesh Railway collected 759,610 taka in fares and 309,525 taka in fines, bringing the day’s total recovery to 1,069,135 taka.
Railway officials noted that ticketless travel remains a persistent challenge, particularly during peak travel periods and on high-demand routes. Beyond the immediate loss of revenue, fare evasion contributes to overcrowding, undermines service quality and creates safety risks for legitimate passengers. The latest operation also included the verification of 3,775 tickets, reflecting an expanded on-board compliance check aimed at discouraging misuse of discounted, expired or destination-mismatched tickets.
Senior managers indicated that enforcement drives of this scale will be conducted more frequently, combining surprise inspections with routine checks. The authority is also seeking to complement enforcement with service improvements, including expanding digital ticketing, strengthening access control at busy stations and deploying additional staff during festive seasons and long weekends. Public awareness campaigns are planned to remind passengers of their legal obligations and the penalties associated with non-compliance.
Transport analysts argue that sustained enforcement must be paired with greater ticket availability and queue management at stations, particularly in commuter hubs where long waits can push travellers towards irregular practices. Improving real-time seat availability information and streamlining mobile ticketing are also expected to reduce incentives for fare evasion. In the longer term, Bangladesh Railway aims to modernise its inspection regime through handheld verification devices and data-led deployment of TTEs on routes with historically high evasion rates.
Operational Snapshot (4 February)
| Indicator | Figure |
|---|---|
| Trains inspected | 149 |
| Ticket examiners deployed | 206 |
| Ticketless passengers identified | 5,220 |
| Tickets verified | 3,775 |
| Fares recovered | Tk 759,610 |
| Fines imposed | Tk 309,525 |
| Total recovered | Tk 1,069,135 |
Bangladesh Railway said the day’s results demonstrate the financial and operational value of targeted enforcement. Officials expressed confidence that regular, transparent inspections—paired with easier access to legitimate tickets—would gradually improve compliance and help safeguard revenue needed to maintain and upgrade the rail network.
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