Families have been urged to leave their cars at home and make use of the £3 bus fare cap when visiting top attractions this bank holiday weekend.
Minister for local transport Simon Lightwood said the cap allowed families to "get out and enjoy everything their area has to offer...without worrying" about the cost of travel.
Bus fares on thousands of routes in England are capped at £3 until March 2027. Among popular tourist destinations than can be reached through the scheme include Alton Towers, Blackpool Pleasure Beach, Warwick Castle, West Midlands Safari Park and the National Space Centre.
Visitor attractions company Merlin said it encourages people to "leave the car at home", and reported an increase in visits to its sites by public transport.
READ MORE: Join our Mirror politics WhatsApp group to get the latest updates from Westminster
Mr Lightwood said: "Whether it's a trip to the seaside, a day out at a museum or just visiting friends, we want people to get out and enjoy everything their area has to offer - without worrying about the cost.
"That's why we've kept the £3 fare cap in place and why we're investing in better, more reliable buses across the country.
"It's about making travel simpler, cheaper and better for everyone, driving growth and access to opportunity."
Patricia Yates, chief executive of tourism agency VisitBritain, said cutting the cost of public transport to England's "first-class attractions" is "removing barriers whilst supporting greener travel choices".
You may also like
Postal services to the US 'temporarily suspended' amid new rules
134th Durand Cup: NorthEast Utd defend title in style with dominant win over Diamond Harbour
SAD MP Harsimrat Badal urges EAM to raise with US govt issue of freezing of work visas for foreign truck drivers
Meta's billion-dollar hiring spree: DeepMind boss says money can't buy the frontier of AI. Sam Altman reacts
GB News host caught up in migrant hotel clash says 'it's kicking off' as chaos erupts