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Peter
Traveller
9337 comments

Posted 14 years ago

Hi.

Just a short answer.
Trains are generally free of [b]supplements in Scandinavia[/b]. Except the [b]X2000[/b] train running in Sweden and to Copenhagen and the night trains all over Scandinavia.
The [b]IC Oslo-Stockholm[/b] needs a reservations as well. As well the long distance day trains in Norway, but I will check it again if still needed this year.

Reservation fees: [u]https://rail.cc/en/interrail-train-reservation[/u]

Traveling up to Denmark you can use the trains mentioned by you.
The [b]ICE Hamburg to Copenhagen[/b] (free of supplements) or the [b]CNL night train coming from Basel[/b] (if you start from Basel SBB, you can use it for free as it is the border station):
[u]https://rail.cc/en/basel-copenhagen-night-train/f3763[/u]

If you want to have a stop in Berlin, use an ICE Basel-Berlin and then by [b]night train to Malmö[/b] (just a maximum of 1 hour away from Stockholm):
[u]https://rail.cc/en/night-train/berlin-malmoe-en-300/58[/u]

Peter :)

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Robert_Antonio
Traveller
53 comments

replied 14 years ago

Consider that all direct trains between Malmö and Stockholm are X2000 with compulsory reservation 7 €. You can travel by normal IC trains with change in Göteborg, but this journey takes two times longer that the direct one.

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Flo
Traveller
10724 comments

replied 14 years ago

Well...there are two direct trains Stockholm - Malmö without compulsory reservation which take between ~0h45 and ~1h30 longer than the X2000: ;)

Stockholm dep 0825 |1615

Malmö dep 0817 | 1600

Flo 8)