Every route 99. 2 of 24

Saturday 7th February 2026

Welcome to the second instalment in this year’s fortnightly series looking at all 24* of Britain’s bus routes numbered 99 and after my first outing in East Sussex I’ve moved across into neighbouring West Sussex to explore the long standing link between Petworth and Chichester via Duncton, Upwaltham and Halnaker.

(* Blog subscribers and early morning online readers may be puzzled by the reference to 24 routes numbered 99 having initially referred to a total of 23, but thanks to a commentator on the last blog I realised I’d overlooked Arriva’s 99 in Telford. Also , to clarify it’s not my intention to cover X99 numbered routes nor special one-off style routes which use the number 99.)

I’ve featured this route 99 previously as one following best practice of combining a fixed route and timetable with an optional flexible ‘on demand’ route variation to serve small hamlets either side of the A285 that would otherwise be isolated.

That sensible arrangement was brought to an end by the county council’s consultants when the favoured Book-A-Bus DRT scheme began in Summer 2023. Instead of phoning the operator, Compass Bus, who’d arrange for the bus to divert off the fixed route on a couple of journeys when needed, passengers now have to either use the Book-A-Bus app to book a journey on the segregated 99 Flex route or ring the central call centre that deals with all Pingo’s DRT operations.

However on a Wednesday and Saturday as a nod to the old arrangements one southbound trip from Petworth and one northbound return journey from Chichester regularly diverts away from Duncton on the A285 to serve Sutton and Bignor.

Other than those journeys (09:27 ex Petworth and 12:35 ex Chichester), the timetable comprises four return journeys on Mondays to Saturdays including a morning peak journey arriving into Chichester at 08:21 and an afternoon peak return at 17:38. The timetable utilises one bus with no service on Sundays.

I’ve made a couple of journeys in recent weeks to get a feel for the route including the 11:00 northbound departure from Chichester which is probably a bit early for returning shoppers with the post peak inbound journey only arriving into the city at 10:03.

We only carried two passengers, one boarding at the first stop opposite Chichester Cathedral and the other at St Richards Hospital which the bus serves on its way out of the city, the latter travelling to Duncton and the former all the way to Petworth.

The return journey at 11:52 from Petworth Square was busier, helped by three boarding as the bus wanders around Petworth including a couple of dog legs both involving reverse turns as well as a circuit or two of Petworth Square which I’ve tried to illustrate in the diagrammatic map below.

Two more boarded in Market Square and four more as we neared Chichester with another three at the hospital, so not too bad a journey.

On another day, a Wednesday, I decided to try out both the 99 Flex DRT option (well, it would have been rude not to) and the scheduled return journey from Chichester at 12:35 which runs via Sutton and Bignor.

I tried to book the 99 Flex to take me from Pulborough railway station across to Duncton to link up with the timetabled 99. The ideal would have been a “seamless journey” from train, via DRT, to the fixed timetabled 99. It’s what all the DRT protagonists say is a great use of DRT. They’ve obviously never tried doing it in practice. You’re given a 30 minute window for the pick up – so you have to allow for the worst case scenario of being picked up at the end of that window otherwise you might be left behind if the train hasn’t arrived at the earliest extreme of the window. That causes a challenge at the other end of the route, in that you might miss the timetabled 99.

It was one of the most stressful journeys I’ve made in a long time.

The app wouldn’t let me book it – stating erroneously “we couldn’t find a trip between these locations that fits the current settings” when I tried to book on the Tuesday before travel. Instead I booked by phone and was given a window of 11:20 to 11:50 and was reassured there’d be a note added for the driver to advise ‘passenger arriving by train due at 11:22’.

In the event the train was five minutes late but no sign of the bus when I arrived at Pulborough. By 11:35 there was still no sign of the bus so I gave the call centre a ring for an update but none could be provided as a “glitch” meant they couldn’t see the bus tracking. Luckily soon after that I received an automatic voice message on my phone advising the bus was five minutes away so I reckoned there’d just be enough time to get to Duncton for the 99.

And, thankfully it did work out OK, with an empty minibus arriving at 11:41…

… and we set off a couple of minutes later taking the route via Fittleworth to Duncton arriving there at 11:55 in good time for the Chichester bound 99 at 11:59 (just).

That bus arrived with three on board with one more boarding in Westhampnet on the outskirts of Chichester.

The return journey at 12:35 picked up four passengers three of whom alighted in Bignor, thereby justifying the deviation, and the fourth went to Petworth.

It’s a delightful route with some great views of the Downs…

… and Petworth itself is worth an explore, especially if you like cobbled streets…

… and browsing antique shops.

The diversion to serve Sutton and Bignor takes the bus along some amazing narrow roads including the interestingly named Folly Lane.

Checking out Southdown’s timetable for the route in 1968, then numbered 63/63A, there were eight journeys on Mondays to Saturdays with six on Sundays. Sutton and Bignor were served by a 163 with three return journeys only to Petworth on Tuesdays and Saturdays.

So, although the main timetable has reduced somewhat, those hamlets now have a shopping service to Chichester, albeit just one journey, but, in addition, they do have the benefit of the Book-A-Bus 99 Flex and can try and book a journey to Petworth at any time to suit their needs. I doubt many do.

Roger French

Did you catch the previous blog in this series? 1 of 24 Eastbourne-Hastings.

Blogging timetable: 06:00 TThS

28 thoughts on “Every route 99. 2 of 24

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  1. Hopefully the fad for DRT will die a death in due course when the consultants find some different new clothes for the emperor to try on – preferably in a sector other than public transport!

    DRT does have a role to play, but nowhere near as widely as its proponents are trying to make out, and it certainly shouldn’t be being used to replace timetables operations as is happening so often today.

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  2. if we ignore cost lf provision and app or computer booking systems not working then Roger analysis shows arguably better provision for passengers compared to Southdown glory days.

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    1. But if you don’t ignore those factors and include the other downsides like the bus being ordered by someone else on the other side of the operating area when you would like to travel then I think DRT has been conclusively proved to be a waste of money in this country and inconvenient to boot.
      mikeC

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  3. The flex99 indeed has a livery in similar to Southdown apple green a nice touch.

    were the weekly fixed route past and present variations due to market days of yore?

    JBC Prestatyn

    Roger= Regular Omnibus Guy Everywhere Riding in the acronym in preceeding comment

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  4. Yes, this is a lovely part of the country, and Petworth is very special – thanks for covering this route 99. Strange that with all that tourist traffic our great commercial bus companies prefer to take great bites out of one another rather than grow their own new market. We have to hope that the – as yet – hourly route 1 will not succumb to the dreaded DRT. It’s interesting that Arriva, the only big fish to try it out, has dropped its ‘Click’ buses.

    I had a quick Google Maps check, and you can still get from Petworth to the outside world using the route 1, though it has makes less than sparkling connections with the trains at Pulborough. Horsham, Gatwick, Brighton, Worthing (direct on the 1), Arundel, Chichester all take at least double the time to reach than you’d take by car … and don’t bother to try an evening out!

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  5. This blog reminds me of my “culture vulture” late father. His motoring and tourism gobbled up enormous numbers of castles, cathedrals, museums and fine country houses – with me and mother also in the family car. My older sister was quite independent and would have missed out on all these treats usually being with her school friends at one of those friend’s homes. Petworth House and the Roman villa at Bignor were certainly on my “enforced” childhood agenda of visits. Considering the size of Petworth Park I always find it astonishing that the grand house was built, hemmed up against the park wall with the town a short walk away through either a pedestrian or a carriage gate. Well after my father’s death and out of the blue, mother fancied a repeat visit to Bignor which I enjoyed and appreciated far more than my visit as a schoolboy. It is a fine site, and I was able to “pair” this visit with other calls at Fishbourne Roman villa. The setting at Fishbourne is unremarkable but at Bignor, I can understand why the Romans built a villa there. Petworth, Fishbourne and Bignor guidebooks on file refer. My only experience of Compass Bus is Route 32 between Guildford and Redhill. One very wet day aboard a very fast bus it was a marvel that the puddles did not make a water incursion under the doors. It was more like a speedboat ride with water being splashed up by the front nearside wheel being almost constant. Mother surrendered her driving licence in 2014 at my behest. My penultimate trip with her as a passenger involved the car’s front nearside wheel mounting the kerb damaging both tyre and wheel and the final straw was when the car’s offside wheels overrode the centre line requiring an oncoming driver to vigorously signal mother to pull over!

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  6. indeed the house at Petworth reminds me of Arundel Castle in its relationship to the commercial community. Were there railway lines in the area past and was Sussex one of the earlier areas of dial a ride services?

    JBC Prestatyn

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    1. I Googled what was the first Dial a Ride. I didn’t get a straight answer but it said 1972 Oxford to Abingdon. 19.10.74 GOLDERS GREEN STATION  –  Hampstead Garden Suburb  –  GOLDERS GREEN STATION ( Mon-Sat ) dial a bus .  Other website say they first started in 1980.

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    2. There was a railway but the station at Petworth was 2 miles south of the town on the route of the 99. The line ran from Pulborough to Petersfield also serving Midhurst. The station building is still extant and is now a bed and breakfast and upmarket restaurant with food being served in former Pullman carriages. The inn on the main road which served the station was still open last summer and had good food at reasonable prices.

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  7. Such a pity that it’s no longer possible to simply phone Compass in advance and ask for it to divert the 99. It was ideal for us when we wanted to walk from Bignor up to the South Downs Way three years ago. I’d think the Flex DRT may be too off-putting for others who want to get to the country’s most popular long-distance walk.

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  8. Is the bus station in Chichester Stagecoach-only? Surely every bus serving the (rail) station would be helpful to the residents of such as Petworth and intermediate points.

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    1. The bus station in Chichester is a bit out of the way for the main shopping street and the bus stop outside of the old Post Office (opposite the Cathedral) is more handy – and for buses heading east, like the 99, would have to negotiate the one way system to access the bus station, and probably get stuck in traffic waiting for the level crossing barriers to go up.

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  9. Don’t suppose I can interest you in either 99 service the other side of the ditch, to make it 26 in the series?

    Ultserbus has a 99 from Enniskillen to Bundoran, once daily on weekdays
    Dublin Bus has a 99 that runs the length of Phoenix Park, through the park, half hourly every day

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  10. I saw a recent Facebook post of the Chiltern Ealing Ruislip bus now has a notice in the relevant bus stop from Chiltern that it is officially Britain’s Quirkinest Bus Route

    JBC Prestatyn

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  11. Oh what a pity – I thought the variable routing on Compass Bus route 99 was still in operation (I mis-remembered your earlier post about the new DRT service). I’ve been singing its praises as a long-standing and (presumably) successful example of this model.

    I wonder what the statistics show for how successful the variable routing was (and how it compares with the other long-standing similar route near Pewsey).

    Stephen H

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  12. As well as Duncton (served by this 99), West Sussex has Buncton – on Compass’s 100 bus, and Runcton, which has a Stagecoach 600 bus every 20 minutes! W.Sussex also has Bignor and Bognor.

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  13. I had no idea that the bus timetable for route 99 changed since the compass travel bus times book dated second of April 2024. I know it says for route 99 the service may be subject to change from June 2024. And I check that website. But never knew about this new timetable.

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  14. I Google what was the first Dial a Ride. I didn’t get a straight answer but it said 1972 Oxford to Abingdon. 19.10.74 GOLDERS GREEN STATION  –  Hampstead Garden Suburb  –  GOLDERS GREEN STATION ( Mon-Sat ) dial a bus .  Other website say they first started in 1980.

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    1. I posted that comment by accident I thought it was replying to someone but it didn’t. I have managed to post the reply now

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    2. the London country old Harlow Harlow area one was about the same time as hampstead garden suburb using similar Ford transits. I am sure other ring and ride about the same time but interesting those early ones were hardly in deep rural areas

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  15. Roger may have to be fleet of foot for one of the 99’s. The one in the Chew Valley is under threat with funding in doubt after April

    BW2

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    1. “WESTLocal route 99 has been amended from 31st August 2025 to better reflect passenger demand. The route is an 18 month trial funded by the West of England Combined Authority and delivered in partnership with the Chew Valley Community CIC.”

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          1. Chew Valley 99 has been retendered by the Combined Authority to run from Easter to the end of August. In their usual style, no decision has yet been made on an award. Given that the service carries barely double figures on school days, it looks very unlikely to be extended any further. The wild variety of vehicles and erratic reliability of the service has not helped to endear it to the travelling public.

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  16. In 1968 Southdown’s 163 journey at 0901 on a Tuesday was operated by a Brighton crew, which left Pool Valley at 0700 on Service 22 terminating at Petworth at 0900. The journey served Duncton first (which it did every Monday – Friday), turning at The Cricketers and then diverting to Sutton and Bignor on the return.

    I drove it once and remember how narrow and twisting the lanes were, a very steep hill at one point (from Sutton up to Bignor?) and an awkward reversing movement at Bignor. The bus that day was an East Lancs PD2, 797, and the conductor was Vic Oliver. With the low overhanging trees showing in Roger’s photo, I don’t think you’d get a double decker up there today.

    Bob Sanderson

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