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Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 10:58 AM
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More Rail Questions

I am still alittle confused on the bahn site. Here are some questions:

Am I correct in thinking that I can buy a GERMAN rail pass at a train station while I am in Germany?

If I do get a German rail pass and I go on an overnight train does it count as one day or two?

If I go on the bahn site and I plug in my departure and arrival station, is it correct that the German Rail Pass would be accepted there?

Is it a good deal to buy the pass with the rental car option or it is better to shop around and do the rental car separately?

Thanks, Mille
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Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 11:10 AM
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Repost your query with a better subject, like "German Rail Pass Question" or even "German Rail Pass -- Is Overnight One Day or Two?"

As it is now, no one can tell what it's about and the people who know the answer will not bother reading your post.
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Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 11:10 AM
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Yes you can buy German railpasses at some stations - main stations i believe and last time i checked only 5- and 10-day versions and not the cheaper 4-day version or 6- and 8-day versions that are sold here. Do your homework to see where you can buy the 5- or 10-day passes if that fits your plans.

If you board the overnight train after 7pm you put the next day in as your unlimited travel day - you cannot take a connecting train to the night train however as that would require another day - only the actual night train itself.
German railpass is accepted on all regular passenger trains in Germany, ICEs and all without supplement - there are a few InterCity Sprinters for business types running a very few routes at odd times that do require a slight surcharge.

If you only need a car four or five days or less the German Rail n Drive can be a great deal - more car then you're usually better with a straight up car rental.

For pass prices in the U.S. or any questions regarding passes or passes themselves i always recommend BETS (www.budgeteuropetravel.com) and they usually don't charge Raileurope's $15-18 mailing fee. Both railpasses and rail and drives are indeed sold in the U.S. and if 4-days is all you need it may be cheaper.
Things may have changed on bahn.de and perhaps you can buy all varities of German passes there but not last time i checked. Twin passes are two names on one pass for a cheaper price.

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Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 11:57 AM
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ira
 
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Hi M,

Before you buy any raipasses, check the prices of your trains at www.bahn.de.

Railpasses aren't usually worth the money.

If you do need one, you buy it in the US.

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Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 11:59 AM
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ira
 
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PS

For most overnight trains, the railpass allows you a seat, not sleeping accomodations.

You have to pay extra for that.

Also, if you want reserved seats, which are required on high-speed trains, you have to buy a reservation.
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Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 12:06 PM
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Germany offers many types of discounted rail tickets, so a pass is often not cost-effective.

<<<If I go on the bahn site and I plug in my departure and arrival station, is it correct that the German Rail Pass would be accepted there?>>>

No, because Bahn.de will show you destination stations in just about every country in Europe. So it will give you a schedule from Rome to Naples, but that doesn't mean a German train pass will cover that trip.
enzian is offline  
Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 12:14 PM
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I booked German train tickets online. I paid extra for the reserved seats.

I don't understand what is meant by reserved seats. The tickets I printed out don't have seat numbers on them. Does reserved simply mean that I am guaranteed a seat? Will I have an assigned seat when I get there?
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Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 12:37 PM
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<Railpasses aren't usually worth the money>.

Railpasses are always worth the money if you do you research. They can be not worth the money if you don't.

I think 'usually not worth' is not true - i can show you plenty of itineraries with the German Twin Pass that are well worth the money - the German pass is in many ways a bargain compared to other passes.

About $160 p.p. in 2nd class for 4 days with extra days only $21 a day. Thus the longer you buy the cheaper per day they get. For $21 a day even the bargain Lander Passes, highly restricted, could cost more.

And even at $40/day or about 30 euros if going as many do between Frankfurt and Munich and back even the special discounted tickets could cost more - if you do day trips from Munich to Salzburg and the Rhine boats, etc. way more.

But discounted tickets can be better but then you lose flexibility - non-changeable, non-refundable - not good if landing in Frankfurt and wishing to take the next ICE to Berlin. Or else you must build in ample fudge time and be wiling away some hours waiting or miss the train if you don't schedule fudge time.

Thus to judge the efficacy of a railpass in just dollar$ SenSe is myopic IMO.

and the advance online cheapos are often exhausted... if you plan far ahead and compare then the railpass may be a waste of money for your plans...but often not. Especially if you want flexibility to take any ole train anytime.
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Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 04:44 PM
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But make it clear...as Ira (who I hate to contradict as he is IMO Fodor's MVP poster due to the many conscise informative and always polite to the point posts he makes) implies, many folks overbuy railpasses in general - often blindy thinking they are great deals. It's so easy to do research now with actual in-europe fees that it's relatively easy to see the benefits of a pass or not.
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Old Mar 23rd, 2007 | 06:40 PM
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Hello milliebest. I booked my reservations through Rail Europe this morning at 1.800.438.7245. They were very helpful and compared point to point fares vs Rail Pass. In my case, it was cost effective to purchase point to point tickets.

FYI, I did not realize the rail fares were similar to airfares in that, if I had purchased my Eurostar tickets (Paris to London) in November, I would have saved 50%. I was told that the rail systems will be extremely busy due to the Spring break.

Rail Europe will also explain how to count your days. I remember reading something about connecting trains counting as two days.
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Old Mar 24th, 2007 | 05:01 AM
  #11  
ira
 
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Hi BoniseA

>I booked German train tickets online. I paid extra for the reserved seats.
....The tickets I printed out don't have seat numbers on them.

Are you certain?

It should have a train number, a car number and a seat number.

Alternatively, did you get an email with a seat confirmation notice?

>Does reserved simply mean that I am guaranteed a seat?

Yes.

>Will I have an assigned seat when I get there?

You should.

From whom did you buy the tickets?

ira is offline  
Old Mar 24th, 2007 | 05:03 AM
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ira
 
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Hi PQ,

>Railpasses are always worth the money if you do your research. <

>many folks overbuy railpasses in general - often blindy thinking they are great deals. <

I agree with you on both counts.

ira is offline  
Old Mar 24th, 2007 | 08:21 AM
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BoniseA:
>I booked German train tickets online. I paid extra for the reserved seats.
....The tickets I printed out don't have seat numbers on them.<

Does the printout ticket say anything about "1 Sitzplatz, Wg. xy, Pl. xyz" underneath the blue word "Reservierung"? If yes, "Wg." (Wagen) xy is the car number, "Pl." (Platz) xyz is the seat number. I don't know why they use those stupid abbreviations.

If the field under "Reservierung" is empty, then you won't have a reservation unless you have a separate confirmation or e-mail with car and seat number.
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Old Mar 24th, 2007 | 08:52 AM
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Thank you Quokka and Ira,

I booked through bahn.de

Ira, after your response I was looking at the tickets and wondering how to read them. I could definitely pick out the word Reservierung, so I knew they were reserved.

Quokka, then I saw your reponse and I had the entire answer. We're in wagon 23 and places 61 and 63.

Woo Hoo!!
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Old Mar 24th, 2007 | 12:47 PM
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Great!
quokka is offline  
Old Mar 24th, 2007 | 12:51 PM
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ira
 
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Good for you, M.

ira is offline  
Old Jun 2nd, 2007 | 07:24 AM
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milliebest - what did you do?
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Old Jun 28th, 2007 | 07:15 AM
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Since the title is so broad, can I chime in on the Railpass v Ticketed Travel debate?

From Kassel, DE to Florence, IT; for two, one way, second class. I figure 365E (Kassel-Basel 185, Basel-Chiasso 100, Chiasso-Firenze 80). Round trip = 730E = $982US

Eurail Select Pass Saver 3 countries, 5 days = $365US * 2 travelers = $730US

The cost appears lower, first class travel, three extra days of travel.

What am I missing? Thanks.

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Old Jun 28th, 2007 | 07:28 AM
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Rail passes can be very good value in countries which have good rail systems and high standard fares - like Germany or Switzerland. They are not of much use in countries with limited rail systems and cheap local fares, such as Greece or Croatia.
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Old Jun 28th, 2007 | 07:36 AM
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Regardless of country, the MORE you use a railpass the more economical it becomes.

And last I heard you do not need a seat reservation to ride an ICE in Germany.

Has that changed?
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