Route 35 Survey Report

Route 35 Bus Service – Resident Survey Report | Findochty Community Council

Resident Survey Report · 26 May 2026

Route 35 Bus Service

A joint survey of residents on the Moray section of the Route 35 operated by Stagecoach North Scotland, conducted by four community councils.

Findochty · Portknockie · Buckie · Cullen & Deskford Community Councils

Note on methodology: This report draws on structured survey responses from Findochty, Buckie and Cullen & Deskford community councils (99 responses in total), supplemented by qualitative resident feedback gathered by Portknockie Community Council via Facebook (22 respondents). Because Portknockie's data is qualitative rather than structured, it is not included in the quantitative totals but is incorporated in the thematic analysis. The combined reach of this survey effort is 121 residents.

Key Statistics at a Glance

Figures below are drawn from the 99 structured responses. Portknockie's 22 qualitative responses are incorporated in the thematic section.

121 Residents engaged across four communities
57% Daily or weekly users - the service is essential infrastructure for them
79% Have experienced late running - the most reported problem
71% Have experienced cancellations, often with little or no notice
30% Rate the service Poor or Very Poor; only 34% rate it Good or Very Good

Frequency of Use

Punctuality: How Often Is the Bus on Time?

Overall Service Rating

Issues Experienced (% of respondents who selected each issue)

1. Respondent Profile

Of the 99 structured respondents, 33.3% use the service daily, 23.2% weekly, and 43.4% occasionally. The 56.6% who travel daily or weekly include commuters, students, healthcare patients and people without access to a car, for whom this service is essential infrastructure. Problems with reliability affect them disproportionately.

Frequency of useResponses% of total
Daily3333.3%
Weekly2323.2%
Occasionally4343.4%

2. Punctuality

Only 45.5% of respondents report the bus is on time often or always. A combined 54.5% say it is only sometimes, rarely, or never on time. Portknockie feedback independently corroborates this, with residents specifically raising the failure of the app to provide live tracking, meaning that even when services are running, passengers have no reliable way of knowing when a bus will arrive.

How often is the bus on time?Count% of total
Always1515.2%
Often3030.3%
Sometimes4040.4%
Rarely1313.1%
Never11.0%

3. Overall Reliability

65.7% of respondents rate the service no better than Average, with 30.3% rating it Poor or Very Poor. Among the 56 daily and weekly users, 35.7% rate it Poor or Very Poor, rising to 71.4% rating it no better than Average. Portknockie residents echo this view and note that, for many, there is simply no alternative - the bus is not a choice but a necessity.

RatingCount% of total
Very Good1313.1%
Good2121.2%
Average3535.4%
Poor2222.2%
Very Poor88.1%

4. Issues Experienced

Respondents were asked to select all issues they had personally experienced. Late running and cancellations dominate. Over half of respondents have experienced poor or absent communication when disruption occurs, which compounds the operational problem by leaving passengers stranded with no information. Running early (departing ahead of timetable) was reported by 18.2% of respondents, meaning passengers who arrive at stops on time still miss buses. All of these themes are independently confirmed by Portknockie residents.

IssueCount% of respondents
Late running7878.8%
Cancellations7070.7%
Poor/no updates when disrupted5151.5%
Overcrowding3131.3%
Running early (departing before timetable)1818.2%

5. What Residents Say Would Improve the Service

The three principal improvements directly mirror the three most commonly reported problems. Residents are not asking for radical change; they are asking for a timetable that is adhered to and meaningful communication when it is not. Portknockie residents additionally call for coaches on longer journeys (for toilet facilities and luggage/buggy/wheelchair space) and for timetabling that better serves working hours.

Improvement requestedCount% of respondents
Better timekeeping / punctuality5757.6%
More buses / increased frequency5454.5%
Live updates and better communication4545.5%
Less overcrowding1616.2%

6. Qualitative Feedback: Key Themes

Structured responses from 99 respondents and free-text comments from 22 Portknockie respondents via Facebook produced consistent themes across all four communities.

6.1 Essential travel disrupted: work, education and healthcare

Respondents across all communities describe specific, material consequences: missed work shifts and loss of pay, inability to maintain regular college attendance, and disrupted journeys to medical appointments at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary. One Portknockie resident was stranded at ARI when the 14:30 service was cancelled and was advised to travel to Macduff to connect - a wholly inadequate contingency for a patient travelling home from hospital. Another Portknockie resident has resorted to hitchhiking to reach work in Elgin, a situation flagged as dangerous, and particularly so in winter conditions.

"I travel daily to college. Numerous times a week the bus is cancelled or late. I have a placement in Portgordon and this bus is always cancelled — I have to hang around for an hour until the next one if it arrives."
"My son depends on the earliest bus from Low Street, Banff to get to work in Aberdeen. Buses breaking down make him late and he loses pay. Your app is seldom correct."
"Service is poor at the best of times. It is the only option for critical journeys to Aberdeen and ARI."

6.2 Cancellations with no notice

Cancellations at short notice, sometimes discovered only on arrival at the stop, are a recurring complaint across all communities. The Stagecoach app is specifically identified as unreliable, either failing to flag cancellations until the last moment or showing a bus that is not running.

"Buses get cancelled with no notice. Very hard to plan for appointments as not reliable. We have been told to vacate a bus from Aberdeen to Elgin as it cannot go further than Macduff due to shortage of staff."
"I have experienced the tracker showing a bus that was out of service when the driver went past laughing. That is fantastic when it is raining and you have walked half a mile to get there."

6.3 Timetabling and working hours

Portknockie respondents specifically raise the impact of recent timetable changes on those travelling to Elgin for work, noting that revised departure times no longer align with working hours, forcing an earlier arrival or leaving passengers waiting in Elgin for up to an hour for a return service.

"The timetable has changed and does not suit working hours, especially for people working in Elgin who either have to go in earlier or wait about in Elgin for an hour to come home." [Portknockie resident]
"Our daughters would like to use the bus in the morning, but the first bus gets them to Fochabers almost an hour early, and the later bus gets them there about 10 minutes late. The recent change to the 7:15 has made the situation worse."

6.4 Vehicle condition and suitability

Both the structured responses and Portknockie feedback raise concerns about the vehicles deployed on this route. The absence of toilet facilities on a journey of up to two and a half hours is a particular concern, especially in the context of elderly passengers travelling to ARI. Double-decker buses are described as poorly suited to rural and weather conditions.

"As it is a two-and-a-half-hour journey to Aberdeen, I think we need a coach rather than a double decker so that a toilet is available, as a lot of elderly people use this service for the ARI."
"Double decker buses used on a predominantly rural route to which they are not suited. Unstable in winds, top heavy in icing and snow conditions, and very uncomfortable."

6.5 What residents value: drivers and fares

Feedback is not uniformly negative. Portknockie respondents specifically commend the courtesy of drivers and describe the fare as reasonable. This view is consistent with the structured survey data, where 34.3% rate the overall service Good or Very Good. The frustration expressed in this report is with operational and management failures, not with the staff on the ground.

7. Boarding Locations

Of the 27 respondents who completed the paper/Google Form, boarding locations were recorded as follows. The Buckpool respondent who states they had to drive to the stop because no bus serves the top of Buckpool indicates a further access gap beyond what the quantitative data captures.

Boarding stopCount
Findochty13
Buckie (town centre)8
Portknockie2
Buckpool1
A98 Slackhead1
Portgordon1
Buckpool (drove to stop - no local stop)1

8. Requests to Stagecoach North Scotland

On behalf of the residents of the communities served by the Route 35 in Moray, the undersigned community councils request that Stagecoach North Scotland:

  • Provide a written explanation of the root causes of persistent late running and cancellations on this route, and the steps being taken to address them.
  • Commit to a measurable punctuality target for the Route 35 and report progress against it on a quarterly basis.
  • Review the adequacy of driver staffing levels and contingency cover arrangements, which multiple respondents identify as a primary cause of last-minute cancellations.
  • Improve real-time communication when services are disrupted, including prompt updates on the Stagecoach app, which is currently reported as unreliable, and accessible channels beyond X (Twitter).
  • Address the practice of buses departing ahead of timetable, which causes passengers who arrive on time to miss services.
  • Review the current timetable with regard to working hours for key employment destinations including Elgin and Aberdeen, and explain the rationale for recent timetable changes that have reduced the service's utility for working passengers.
  • Review the vehicle allocation on this route with regard to passenger comfort, suitability for rural and adverse weather conditions, toilet facilities for journeys of two hours or more, and adequate space for luggage, buggies and wheelchairs.
  • Consider whether the current frequency adequately serves the communities along the route, particularly for work and school journeys in the morning.

9. Conclusion

This report represents the views of 121 residents across four communities, the majority of them regular users. The findings are consistent across all survey channels and all communities, and leave no doubt that service reliability is failing a significant proportion of the people this route is meant to serve.

The testimonies of residents stranded at hospital, losing pay due to late buses, or resorting to hitchhiking to get to work make clear that this is not a matter of inconvenience; it is causing real harm.

We ask Stagecoach North Scotland to treat this report seriously and to enter into dialogue with the community councils with a view to agreeing tangible improvements. We would welcome a meeting to discuss these findings at their earliest convenience.

Submitted jointly by:

Findochty Community Council Portknockie Community Council Buckie Community Council Cullen & Deskford Community Council