Trains win for journeys under 4 hours (city center to city center) and routes like London-Paris, Barcelona-Madrid, and Rome-Florence. Flying wins for routes over 5 hours or crossing water. Factor in airport transit time, security, and boarding — a 2-hour flight often takes 5 hours door-to-door.
The advertised flight time is misleading. A "2-hour flight" actually takes 4-6 hours when you account for:
Total door-to-door: 4.5-6.5 hours
A train on the same route often departs from the city center and arrives at the city center, with no security theater, no baggage limits, and you can board 5 minutes before departure.
| Route | Train Time | Flight (door-to-door) | Train Price | Flight Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| London–Paris (Eurostar) | 2h16 | 5-6h | €50-200 | €60-250 |
| Barcelona–Madrid (AVE) | 2h30 | 4.5-5.5h | €30-120 | €40-150 |
| Rome–Florence | 1h30 | 4-5h | €20-60 | €50-120 |
| Paris–Lyon | 2h00 | 4.5-5.5h | €25-90 | €50-150 |
| Amsterdam–Brussels | 1h50 | 4-5h | €25-55 | €60-130 |
| Berlin–Munich | 4h00 | 4.5-5.5h | €30-140 | €50-180 |
| Zurich–Milan | 3h20 | 4.5-5h | €30-80 | €60-150 |
| Route | Train Time | Flight (door-to-door) | Why Flying Wins |
|---|---|---|---|
| London–Rome | 12-15h (connections) | 5-6h | No direct train, multiple changes |
| Paris–Athens | Not practical by train | 5-6h | No viable train route |
| Berlin–Lisbon | 24+ hours | 5-6h | Extreme distance |
| Any route to/from islands | N/A | Varies | Trains can't cross water |
| Scandinavia–Mediterranean | 16-24h | 5-6h | Distance makes trains impractical |
| Route | Train Time | Flight (door-to-door) | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paris–Barcelona | 6h30 | 5-5.5h | Flight slightly faster, train more comfortable |
| London–Amsterdam | 3h50 (Eurostar) | 4.5-5.5h | Similar — train wins on comfort, flight on price if booked early |
| Munich–Venice | 6h30 | 4.5-5h | Flight faster, but the train route through the Alps is stunning |
Train prices in Europe vary enormously by country and booking time:
For environmentally conscious travelers:
On shorter routes where trains are competitive on time and price, the environmental argument strongly favors rail.
Compare prices across all airlines.
For routes under 4 hours by train (London-Paris, Barcelona-Madrid, Rome-Florence), trains are faster door-to-door because they depart from city centers with no security lines. For routes over 5-6 hours, flying is faster despite airport overhead.
It depends on the route and booking time. Budget airlines can be €15-30 for routes that cost €80+ by train. But high-speed trains in Spain, Italy, and France start at €9-15 when booked early. Trains also have no baggage fees.
For the best prices on high-speed trains, book 2-3 months in advance. Regional trains are usually unreserved and the same price regardless of booking time. Night trains and Eurostar also benefit from early booking.
Use the national rail website for each country — sncf-connect.com (France), trenitalia.com (Italy), bahn.de (Germany), renfe.com (Spain). These are almost always cheaper than aggregators like Trainline, which add booking fees.
It varies by country. Switzerland (SBB) and Spain (Renfe AVE) have excellent punctuality. France (SNCF) is generally reliable. Germany (Deutsche Bahn) has struggled with delays — in 2026, only about 64% of long-distance trains arrived on time.
Country-by-country driving requirements, packing list, and emergency contacts — all in one PDF.
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