Train travel continues to gain traction among young travellers in the EU


By AGENCY

Train travel has grown significantly in parts of Europe in the past few years. — Pixabay

Plane, car, bus and boat – there are many ways to travel in and around Europe. But one mode of transport is gaining significant popularity, especially among young people: the train.

According to the European Union’s statistical office, Eurostat, in 2023 EU rail passenger transport hit its highest level in years, with people travelling a total distance of 429 billion kilometres by train.

Across Europe, excitement for train travel has been consistent since after the Covid-19 pandemic. In 2023, rail passenger transport in the EU increased by 11.2% compared to 2022 and almost doubled in comparison with 2020.

“International long-distance travel is booming,” said Michael Peterson, head of long-distance transport at Germany’s national railway company Deutsche Bahn (DB).

He noted that 2024 was the strongest year in the sector for the German railway, with a 22% growth compared to the pre-pandemic year of 2019.

According to a report published in June by the French authority for transports (ART), train usage in France broke a record for the third consecutive year in 2024, confirming the growth of rail transport observed since the end of the pandemic.

Passenger numbers increased by 6% in 2024 compared to 2023, representing an identical rise to the previous year, ART said.

Summer train usage also significantly improved compared to the previous year, fuelled by the Paris 2024 Summer Olympics and the rail pass, which allowed young people aged 16 to 27 to travel unlimited on regional trains for €49 (RM243) per month.

Other countries also actively encourage train travel through national and regional initiatives. For example, the 2025 edition of Spain’s Verano Joven (Young Summer) programme has allocated €120mil (RM595mil) to offer 18- to 30-year-old passengers discounts of up to 90% on medium-distance trains and up to 50% on high-speed trains.

Good initiative

The EU also aims to encourage young people to travel by train through the DiscoverEU initiative. Over 1.6 million have applied since its launch in 2018, and 391,000 travel passes have been given out so far.

DiscoverEU is an initiative through the EU’s Erasmus+ programme that gives 18-year-old EU citizens or legal residents a chance to travel across the continent by rail for free with a “Travel Pass”.

There are two calls for applications each year, one in spring and one in autumn. Applicants have to take part in a quiz as part of the application process, unless they apply as part of a group.

Young people from non-EU states including Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, North Macedonia and Turkiye are also eligible to apply due to their association with the Erasmus+ programme.

In addition to the Travel Pass, participants also receive the DiscoverEU Youth Card, which offers discounts on public transport, hotels, food, and cultural, sporting and other activities in 36 European countries.

The national Erasmus+ agencies organise meetings before, during and after the trip. In Bulgaria, for example, the Erasmus+ National Agency organises pre-departure events and networking opportunities, while participants are encouraged to share travel stories and photos on social media.

The April 2025 DiscoverEU application was open to people born between July 1, 2006 and June 30, 2007. Across the EU, some 156,516 young people applied for the trips and 35,753 were selected.

By country, the highest number of applications came from young people in Germany (24,194), Spain (21,414), Poland (15,932) and the Netherlands (13,106).

The countries with the most successful applicants were Germany (6,143), France (4,977), Italy (4,394), and Spain (3,501).

Other countries with lower but notable numbers of successful applicants include Romania (1,489), Austria (715) and Bulgaria (561).

Austrian European lawmakers Andreas Schieder and Hannes Heide have praised DiscoverEU for enabling young people to travel sustainably: “It is a great opportunity to make train travel attractive to young people in the EU as a climate-friendly means of transport. The future of European mobility lies on the rails.”

Unified system

Although the idea of an interconnected European railway system lives on, the reality is less clear-cut if you’re a regular traveller.

Problems often begin with ticket purchases. For cross-border journeys, multiple tickets are often required, each purchased separately. This is not only inconvenient but also means passenger rights, such as compensation for missed connections, do not apply.

“Problems often arise when a railway line reaches a national border,” said Sebastian Wilken, who writes about international train travel on his blog, Zugpost. These issues include power supply, signalling and safety systems, track gauge differences and even the language skills of train drivers.

The EU has long recognised the problems. Commission president Ursula von der Leyen has noted that cross-border rail travel remains too complicated for many citizens.

“People should be able to use open booking systems to purchase trans-European journeys from multiple providers without losing their right to refunds or alternative travel, she said in her Political Guidelines For The European Commission, published in July 2024.

The commission plans to propose legislation for “uniform digital booking and ticketing services” intended to ensure that “Europeans can buy a single ticket on a single platform and exercise their passenger rights for the entire journey”.

European railways agreed years ago to implement the “Open Sales and Distribution Model”, or OSDM interface standard. DB’s Peterson described it as “the language through which European railways and sales service providers exchange their data”.

This will give the German train company access to the complete ticket portfolio of participating railways and vice versa.

For DB, access will initially start this autumn, when the Austrian Federal Railways (OBB) and Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) are set to be made available. New partners are expected to join monthly.

“We expect that by the end of next year, Europe will be almost comprehensively connected,” said Peterson.

Booking tickets across Europe – whether from Oslo, Norway to Athens, Greece or Warsaw, Poland to Barcelona, Spain – will then be possible in a single step. – enr/dpa

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Travel

You can soon fly direct to Busan from KLIA T2
9 festivals around the globe that celebrate our animal friends
What's there to see in Belize? Well, the Great Blue Hole, for one
No kids allowed: This US cruise line has adopted an adults-only policy
Tourists love to shop in China mainly because of this one thing
Europe’s most active volcano erupts; tour guides told to stay away
'I Lite U' initiative at Bukit Bintang brings delight to visitors
Learning to ski in one of Austria's highest skiable regions
Actress Ashley Parks' favourite places in Rome
3 destinations to add to your travel list this year

Others Also Read