Reservation against Cancellation
A Reservation Against Cancellation (RAC) is a type of ticket that can be purchased for travel on the Indian Railways. Although it ensures certainty of travel, it does not guarantee a berth. A berth will be allocated to the person who reserves an RAC ticket if passengers who already have a confirmed ticket do not turn up before the train departure or get their confirmed ticket cancelled.[1][2] A berth is split into 2 seats for 2 RAC ticket holders. If there’s any last minute cancellations, or if any quota allocations remain unsold, or if any confirmed ticket holders are given a free upgrade (more later), an RAC ticket holder is given the empty berth, the other RAC ticket holder can then convert the 2 seats into a berth.[3]
Generally, RAC/WL tickets will have two numbers - RAC8/RAC2, WL20/WL15, WL12/RAC2, etc. The first number shows the status of the ticket at the time of booking. The second number after the slash (/) shows the status of your ticket at the time of checking the status of the ticket. So, RAC8/RAC2 means that when you purchased the ticket, it may be that yours was the 8th such ticket under RAC category, which has moved 6 places after 6 cancellations before your position which is moved to the 2nd (you can assume that you were the 8th person in the queue and you are the 2nd person now). You can check out the current status of your booking by entering 10-digit PNR number at PNR Status.SO having a RAC ticket means that you can travel sharing a berth with another person.[4]
References
- ↑ "Reservation Rules".
- ↑ "Indian Railways - New Rules". Indian Railways. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
- ↑ "Indian Railways - RAC". Indian Mike Forum. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
- ↑ "Passenger Current Status". Indian Railways. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
External links
- Indian Railways - Reservation rules
- Indian Railways RAC and Waitlists concepts explained, steven_ber, indiamike.com, Dec 19th, 2012