RAIL commuters face an increase of up to 3.2 per cent in the cost of season tickets next year.

Passenger groups, unions and politicians reacted with anger after the cap on regulated fare rises was confirmed.

There have been calls for fares to be frozen following chaos caused by the implementation of new timetables in May.

Many long-distance commuters will see the annual cost of getting to work increase by more than £100 in January.

And Brighton commuters will be among the worst affected, with annual passes to London set to rise by £150 to £4,846.

The announcement came as unions pledged to press ahead with above-inflation pay claims amid growing anger at a call by the Transport Secretary for lower wage rises.

Chris Grayling wrote to union general secretaries on Tuesday, stating he wants to “see lower levels of increase for passengers in future”.

The Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union accused Mr Grayling of trying to cap pay rises and blame workers for high fares.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn described the fares increase as “an insult to everyone who has suffered from the chaos on Britain’s railways”.

He said: “The Government’s shambolic mismanagement of our railways has been a national embarrassment and they must now step in to freeze fares charged on the worst performing routes.

“Labour will take back control of our railways by bringing them into public ownership so they are run in the interests of passengers, not private profit.”

Disruption caused by new timetables led to the Government vetoing further timetable changes expected in December which means upgrades in some areas have been cancelled or delayed indefinitely.

Pressure group Railfuture claimed train passengers are being treated like “second-class citizens compared to motorists”.

Spokesman Bruce Williamson said: “We’ll easily have the most expensive fares in Europe, yet the Government continues to freeze fuel duty for motorists. Why the double standard?”

RMT general secretary Mick Cash said: “With passengers already furious at the shocking level of service on Britain’s rip-off privatised railways, today’s news is just another kick in the teeth that will come back to haunt both the Tory Government and the train companies alike.”

Paul Plummer, chief executive of the Rail Delivery Group, which represents the railway, said: “Fares are underpinning a once-in-a-generation investment plan to improve the railway and politicians effectively determine that season ticket prices should change in line with other day-to-day costs to help fund this.”