Book Train Travel in Europe

Book European trains through national railway websites or Eurail for multi-country trips. High-speed routes like Paris-London or Madrid-Barcelona need advance reservations, while regional trains can be booked day-of. Expect to pay 25-150 euros for long-distance routes depending on speed and advance booking.

  1. Choose your booking method. Use national railway websites (SNCF for France, DB for Germany, Trenitalia for Italy) for single-country trips. Use Eurail.com or Trainline.com for multi-country journeys. National sites are cheaper but less convenient for cross-border travel.
  2. Check if reservations are mandatory. High-speed trains (TGV, AVE, Frecciarossa) and overnight trains require seat reservations. Regional and intercity trains usually don't. Check the train type when booking - if it shows a reservation fee, it's mandatory.
  3. Book 1-4 months ahead for best prices. High-speed trains offer early bird discounts up to 60% off. Book popular routes (Paris-London, Rome-Florence) 2-3 months ahead. Regional trains have fixed prices so booking day-of is fine.
  4. Select your ticket type. Choose flexible tickets if your plans might change - they cost 20-50% more but allow free changes. Fixed tickets are cheaper but have change fees of 15-30 euros. First class costs 30-60% more than second class.
  5. Download tickets to your phone. Most European railways offer mobile tickets. Download the railway app and save tickets offline in case of poor signal. Keep backup screenshots and your booking confirmation email.
Can I use a Eurail pass for all European trains?
Eurail passes work on most national railways but still require seat reservations for high-speed trains (usually 4-10 euros extra). Some budget airlines and private operators aren't included.
What happens if I miss my train with a reserved seat?
Flexible tickets let you take the next available train. Fixed-price tickets with reservations are usually lost, though some operators allow changes for a fee if done before departure.
Do I need to validate my ticket before boarding?
Digital tickets don't need validation. Paper tickets in some countries (Italy, France) need validation at platform machines before boarding to avoid fines.
Can I bring large luggage on European trains?
Most trains have overhead racks and luggage areas. No weight limits like airlines, but space can be tight on busy routes. Reserve luggage space on some high-speed services.