Peter
Traveller
9337 comments
Posted 13 years ago
[b]From MUNICH to VENICE by train.[/b]
Information for Interrail, Eurail travellers and persons with normal train ticket travelling the route Munich (Germany) to Venice (Italy).
Train connection from [b]Munich to Venice[/b]. Direct night train available and recommended.
:arr: [b]Booking of special price tickets (including Europe Special of Deutsche Bahn) here[/b]: [u]https://rail.shop/bahn?s=Munich&e=VENEZIA[/u]
[b]More information[/b] on railcc.
[b]Munich - Venice[/b]: [u]https://rail.cc/en/train/munich-to-venice[/u]
[b]Venice - Munich[/b]: [u]https://rail.cc/en/train/venice-to-munich[/u]
:idea: [b]Book your official online-ticket[/b] for this route directly in the railcc-Bahn shop (including special price tickets and specials like Europe Special):
[u]https://rail.shop/bahn?s=Munich&e=VENEZIA[/u]
The price for you is the same like at DB. But you directly support the railcc project with your purchase. Thank you!
Update: Nov 2016
anonymous
Traveller
2469 comments
Hey!
There is an EC train leaving at 07:31 from Munich Hbf, arriving in Venezia Santa Lucia at 13:56 (via Brennero). The train number is EC 1289. It is not included in the links provided above.
I would like to ask if anybody has information about the reservations on this train. According to the Interrail map, reservation is required for travel in Italy. According to the Interrail website, reservation is compulsory when crossing the border. When I search DB's website (precisely the route Munich - Venice), it reports that a reservation is possible. This connection is not added to the railcc information page. I am quite confused :((
Does anybody have more details?
Flo
Traveller
10724 comments
Hi!
This is a DB ÖBB Eurocity: [u]https://rail.cc/en-type-country/db-%C3%B6bb-eurocity/%C3%B6bb-db-%C3%B6bb-ec/32[/u]
The supplement is payable on the train when travelling to/from Italy; no extra reservation required (also, if you make a seat reservation the supplement is not included AFAIK).
Flo 8)
anonymous
Traveller
2469 comments
So I will just need to pay on the train when I enter Italy? It sounds a bit weird. Especially because Interrail lists it as reservation. I will try calling a booking center for more information.
Thanks for the reply :)
Flo
Traveller
10724 comments
Yeah, you pay on the train. Not necessarily when you enter Italy but when the conductor checks your ticket. Would be curious though what a call center would tell you...