a price (of a travel, cinema ticket, etc) without any discounts
full-fare in British English
(ˈfʊlˌfɛə)
adjective
at a price without any discounts
Buy a full-fare ticket on one of the Asian or Pacific sectors and a second ticketis free.
a full-fare rail ticket
Examples of 'full fare' in a sentence
full fare
The operator should be reimbursed at the full-fare rate for the journey undertaken.
Times, Sunday Times (2009)
The biggest rise has been in full-fare tickets.
The Sun (2011)
I cannot believe they see nothing wrong with downgrading a full-fare-paying passenger.
Times, Sunday Times (2013)
When we finally did speak to someone and said we wanted to come home, they said we'd have to buy a new full-fare business ticket.
Times, Sunday Times (2017)
More importantly, their online booking, flexible pricing and high load-factors mean lower carbon emissions per passenger than for many full-fare airlines.
Times, Sunday Times (2007)
It agreed it should meet the full fare, apologised for the misunderstanding and has paid the outstanding 67.
Times, Sunday Times (2015)
Plus under-18s go free if travelling with two adults paying full fare - they only pay flights, port taxes or bookable extras.
The Sun (2011)
Those forced to pay a full fare after being caught without their card will be able to apply for their money back.
Times, Sunday Times (2017)
Cheap day returns were introduced to fill spare capacity, not squeeze full fare paying passengers.