LIBS - "promotion price" rises from £12 to £13

I note that on a standard day, I am now eligible for a £12 concession ticket. How does one provide proof of age?
On our pre-retirement course, we were told that the best reason for a man to get a bus pass was because it provided proof of eligibility for many age-related concessions. It's quite true - very little else you carry routinely gives proof of age, and bus-passes are easily recognisable!
 
On our pre-retirement course, we were told that the best reason for a man to get a bus pass was because it provided proof of eligibility for many age-related concessions...
I just looked online and it appears that I can't get one until I reach state pension age. I thought you got them at 60?

BTW, it's easy to decode your age from a driving licence number, from the first numeric characters:

YMMDDY, the first M digit has 5 added if female, so is 0/1 for a man, 5/6 for a woman.
 
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I just looked online and it appears that I can't get one until I reach state pension age. I thought you got them at 60?

BTW, it's easy to decode your age from a driving licence number, from the first numeric characters:

YMMDDY, the first M digit has 5 added if female, so is 0/1 for a man, 5/6 for a woman.


It's a little more complex - you get them at the state pension age for a woman of the same age as you. I'm not due for the state pension for another 4 years, but I became eligible for a bus-pass this year. There's an on-line calculator, somewhere on the gov.uk sites, to allow you to figure it out.

And yes, of course you're right about the D.O.B being encoded on an old-style license - but it isn't a quick reference. Further, as far as I recall (it's 40+ years since I first applied for a Driving license :)) you didn't need to give proof of age to get a driving license in that distant era; they took your word for it!
 
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