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Crossing the Charles Bridge, Prague |
It's easy to
travel from London to Prague
by train, via either Cologne or Berlin. Take an afternoon Eurostar to Brussels
and a connecting train to Cologne, then the excellent
'Kopernikus' sleeper train to Prague. Some sleepers on
this train even have a private shower and toilet. Or
take an early-evening
Eurostar from London to Brussels, the overnight
sleeper to Berlin, then a scenic EuroCity journey
from Berlin to Prague with lunch in the restaurant
car. The choice is yours...
On this page:
London to Prague
(via Cologne)
Train times, fares & how to book
London to Prague (via Berlin)
Train times, fares & how to book
Other
destinations: Brno, Ostrava, Karlovy Vary, Cesky
Krumlov, Plzen
On other pages:
Buying UK train tickets
to connect with Eurostar
Taking bikes
Dogs
Luggage
General information
Sponsored links:
Train times London ► Prague (via Cologne):
-
Travel
from London to Brussels by
Eurostar,
leaving London St Pancras at 14:34
and arriving in Brussels
Midi at 17:33.
-
Travel
from Brussels to Cologne by
high-speed Thalys train, leaving
Brussels Midi at
19:25 and arriving
in Cologne at 21:45.
-
Travel from Cologne to
Prague by sleeper train, leaving
Cologne at 22:28 and arriving in Prague (Holesovice station) at
09:18 next
morning. You can transfer by train or metro to
Hlavni station closer to the city centre if you like. This train is the excellent City Night
Line 'Kopernikus', see the photos & information below.
Map of Prague showing Holesovice station,
Map of Prague showing Hlavni station.
Introducing the Cologne-Prague City Night Line sleeper
train...
The City Night Line sleeper train 'Kopernikus' has a
brand-new air-conditioned Czech sleeping-car (1, 2 & 3-berth
deluxe rooms with private shower & toilet, 1, 2 & 3-berth
standard rooms with washbasin, there is a shower at the end
of the corridor for passengers in standard rooms, all rooms
have wingcard locks and power points for
laptop computers & mobiles, a sleeper is the recommended
option if your budget allows), modern air-conditioned German couchette cars
(simple but comfortable berths in 4- or 6-berth compartments), and
ordinary seats (not recommended). Inclusive fares are
charged covering travel and sleeping accommodation. The
sleeping-car fare includes a light breakfast.
Click for pictures and information about this train.
The Kopernikus actually starts its journey in Amsterdam, so
if you're coming from the north of England or Scotland, one
option is to take an overnight ferry from Hull to Rotterdam
or Newcastle to Amsterdam, spend a day in Amsterdam, then
travel overnight to Prague from there.

1, 2 or 3 bed sleeper: The most comfortable &
civilised option, standard with washbasin or deluxe with
shower & toilet. |
|

4-berth couchettes: Ideal for families,
much more space per person than 6-berth couchettes. |
|

6-berth couchettes: A very economical
option, far better than a seat for just a few euros
more... |
|

Above: The sleeper attendant helps
passengers alight from the air-conditioned Czech
sleeping-car of the 'Kopernikus', a travelling hotel.
The red & white vehicle on the left is a couchette car. |
Train times Prague ► London
(via Cologne):
-
Travel from Prague to Cologne
by sleeper train, leaving
Prague Hlavni station at 18:50 or Prague Holesovice station
at 19:02 and arriving in Cologne at 06:14 next
morning. This train is the 'Kopernikus', with
sleeping-car, couchettes & seats, see the photos &
information above. Important: From 30 June to 6
September, this train will start at Prague's Holesovice
station, and won't serve Hlavni station.-
On
Mondays-Fridays, a high-speed
Thalys
train leaves Cologne at 07:14, arriving
Brussels Midi at
09:35. On Sundays, a
Thalys leaves Cologne at 07:40, arriving Brussels 10:01.
-
A
Eurostar
leaves Brussels
Midi at 11:59
and arrives London at 13:03.
Fares (via Cologne):
|
London to
Cologne
by
Eurostar + Thalys: |
London to
Cologne by Eurostar+Thalys or Eurostar+ICE starts at just £79
return.
Book in advance to get the cheapest fares, as the
fare rises as cheaper seats are sold.
One-way fares usually cost more than a return,
so for one-way trips buy a return and throw away the return half. |
|
|
|
Cologne to
Prague
on the Kopernikus: |
In a seat |
In a couchette |
In the sleeping-car
(standard room *) |
|
6-seat
compartment |
6-berth |
4-berth |
3-berth |
2-berth |
single |
|
Savings
fare
one-way: |
£21 |
£36 |
£44 |
£51 |
£59 |
£103 |
|
Savings
fare
return: |
£42 |
£72 |
£88 |
£102 |
£118 |
£206 |
|
Normal fare one-way: |
£88 |
£99 |
£107 |
£114 |
£130 |
£159 |
|
Normal fare return: |
£176 |
£198 |
£214 |
£228 |
£260 |
£318 |
|
Child
0-13 with own berth: |
£8 |
£15 |
£22 |
£29 |
£37 |
£76 |
|
Child 0-5: |
Child 0-5 (inclusive) sharing berth travels free... |
Savings fare =
Special cheap 'Sparnight' fare, book in advance, limited
availability, no refunds, no changes to travel plans.
Normal fare =
fully flexible, refundable, buy any time.
* Fares for
travel in a deluxe sleeper with shower are about 25% more
than for a standard sleeper.
You can check fares for the
Cologne-Prague train (and book online) at
www.bahn.de/citynightline, English button upper right.
How to buy
tickets
online:
The cheapest
and easiest way to book is online. You need to use two separate websites,
so try a dry run on both sites to check availability and fares before
booking for real. Remember that you can't
book the Cologne-Prague train until 60 days before departure.
-
Step
1, go to
www.bahn.de/citynightline, the German Railways night
train website. Select 'English' top right. Now
book a sleeper or couchette ticket from Cologne (Köln Hbf)
to Prague (Praha Hl) and back, looking for the cheap
'Savings' fares. You pay online and print out your own
ticket in .PDF format on your own PC printer. Easy!
-
Step 2,
go to either
www.raileurope.co.uk
or
www.eurostar.com
and using the train times on this page as your guide, book a ticket from London to Cologne
& back (Cologne is listed as Koln on the Eurostar website).
It's a good idea to try both of these websites, as sometimes
one is cheaper than the other, for some strange reason. Bookings
for Eurostar+Thalys open 90 days (3 months) before
departure, and the further ahead you book, the more likely you are to see
the cheapest fares. Tickets can be posted to any UK
address or collected at St Pancras on departure.
One-way London-Cologne fares are usually more expensive than
a cheap return, so for one-way trips buy a return ticket and
throw away the return half. Make sure you allow plenty of
time for the connection in Cologne, preferably between 1½
& 2 hours when connecting with a sleeper train.
It's obvious, but remember that your return departure date from Cologne will
be the day after your departure date from Prague!
Occasionally, if there are
no affordable London-Cologne through fares shown, it can be worth
using
www.raileurope.co.uk
and trying to split the journey into separate
London-Brussels & Brussels-Cologne sections, looking for
cheap fares for each leg.
First, ask for 'Brussels'
to 'Cologne' and
your dates of travel. After booking the Thalys from Brussels to
Cologne, click 'continue shopping' and book a Eurostar
from London to Brussels and back to connect. Make sure you allow for
the 30 minute Eurostar check-in at Brussels on the return
journey.
Advice on buying connecting train tickets from other UK
towns & cities
How to buy tickets by phone:
If you prefer to book by phone, call
Deutsche
Bahn's UK office on 08718 80 80 66
(lines open 09:00-17:00 Monday-Friday, no booking fee) or www.europeanrail.com
on 020 7619 1083 (lines open 09:00-17:00
Monday-Friday, £20 booking fee but may have more time to
help). Click
here for a list of
agencies and other useful information on how to buy tickets
to Europe.
Train times London ► Prague (via Berlin):
This is a good year-round option,
with an early-evening departure from London and an arrival
in Prague after lunch next day, after a pleasant ride along
a scenic river gorge between Berlin and Prague.
- Travel from London to
Brussels by Eurostar, leaving London St Pancras at
18:35 (18:31 on Saturdays & Sundays), arriving Brussels 21:33.
-
Travel overnight from Brussels to Berlin, leaving Brussels
at 23:41 aboard the 'City Night Line' sleeper train
'Perseus',
arriving at Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 08:13 next morning. This
train has sleepers (1 2 or 3 bed rooms, deluxe with shower
or standard with washbasin), couchettes (4 or 6 berth
compartments), seats, and a bistro-bar, see the photos &
information below.
-
Travel
from Berlin to Prague
leaving Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 08:46 and arriving Prague
(Holesovice station) at 13:33. The is the EuroCity
train 'Vindobona' with modern air-conditioned
German coaches and a restaurant car selling drinks, snacks and
affordable full meals - treat yourself to lunch in the
restaurant! It's a scenic journey, too, all
along a river gorge between Dresden and Prague.
Map of Prague showing Holesovice station.
On board
the Brussels-Berlin City Night Line sleeper train...
The Brussels-Berlin
overnight train is one of the
German Railway's excellent 'City Night Line' sleeper trains.
Called the 'Perseus', it
has brand-new 'Comfortline' sleeping-cars
(1, 2 & 3-berth deluxe rooms with private shower &
toilet, 1, 2 &
3-berth standard rooms with washbasin, shower at
the end of the corridor, all rooms with power points for
mobiles & laptop computers),
modern air-conditioned couchettes (choose between a berth in
a 4- or 6-berth compartment), ordinary seats (not
recommended, as a couchette is far better) and a bistro-restaurant
car. Inclusive fares are charged covering
travel plus sleeping accommodation. The
sleeping-car fare includes a light breakfast in the
restaurant car.
Click for more pictures and information about this train.

1, 2 or 3 bed sleeper: The most comfortable &
civilised option, standard with washbasin or deluxe with
shower & toilet.. |
|

4-berth couchettes: Ideal for families.
Much more space per person than 6-berth couchettes. |
|

6-berth couchettes: A very economical
option, far better than a seat for just a few euros
more... |
|
Bistro-bar car:
The bistro
car serves meals, snacks & drinks in the evening,
breakfast in the morning.
Click here for more pictures & information about this
train... |
Train times Prague ► London
(via Berlin):
- Travel from Prague to
Berlin, leaving Prague (Holesovice station) at 14:36 and
arriving in Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 19:13. This is
the EuroCity service 'Vindobona' with modern
air-conditioned coaches and restaurant car.
-
Travel
overnight from Berlin to Brussels by City Night Line
sleeper train 'Perseus', leaving Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) at
21:26 and arriving Brussels at 06:11 next morning.
Seats, couchettes (4-bunk and 6-bunk) and
sleepers (1, 2 and 3-bed with and without private
shower & toilet) are available, plus a bistro-restaurant car.
The sleeper fare includes breakfast. See the
photos & information above. -
Travel from Brussels to London by Eurostar. On
Mondays to Saturdays, a Eurostar leaves Brussels at 06:59
arriving London St Pancras at 07:55. On Sundays, a Eurostar leaves Brussels at
07:59 arriving London at 08:56.
Fares (via Berlin):
|
1. London
to Brussels
by
Eurostar: |
Return fares
start at £59 2nd class, £149 1st class.
One-way fares start at £44 2nd class.
Advice on one-way Eurostar fares. Child, youth & senior fares
|
| |
|
2. Brussels to
Berlin by
sleeper train (per person) |
In a
seat |
In
a couchette |
In
the sleeping-car (standard room) |
|
6-bunk |
4-bunk |
3-bed |
2-bed |
1-bed |
|
Savings fare, one way: |
29 euro (£21) |
39 euro (£28) |
49 euro (£35) |
- |
- |
- |
|
Savings
fare, return: |
58 euro (£42) |
78 euro (£56) |
98 euro (£70) |
- |
- |
- |
|
Normal fare, one-way: |
101 euro (£72) |
113 euro (£81) |
117 euro (£84) |
128 euro (£91) |
144 euro (£103) |
237 euro (£169) |
|
Normal fare, return: |
202 euro (£144) |
226 euro (£162) |
234 euro (£168) |
256 euro (£182) |
288 euro (£206) |
474 euro (£338) |
|
Child 0-14 with own berth: |
51 euro (£36) |
57 euro (£41) |
59 euro (£42) |
64 euro (£46) |
72 euro (£51) |
- |
|
Child 0-5: |
Child 0-5 (inclusive) sharing berth travels free... |
|
|
|
3. Berlin
to Prague by EuroCity train |
Savings fares from £21 each way.
Normal fare
£41 one-way, £82 return 2nd class
Normal fare £65 one-way, £130 return 1st class
|
Savings fare =
Special cheap 'Sparnight' fare, book in advance, limited
availability, no refunds, no changes to travel plans.
Normal fare = fully flexible,
refundable, buy any time.
Couchettes are
sold individually in shared 4 or 6 berth compartments, but
as from 9 December 2007, only whole sleeper compartments on
this route can be booked, it will no longer be possible for
solo passengers to book one sleeper berth in a 2 or 3 bed
compartment and share with other passengers. Call DB's
UK office for prices for sleepers with private shower.
How to
buy tickets online...
The cheapest
and easiest way to book this journey is online, although you
have to use three separate websites. Do a 'dry run'
first on all three sites to check prices and availability
before booking for real.
-
Step 1, go to
www.bahn.de/citynightline, which is the German Railways
official sleeper train website. Select 'English' top
right, then click through to the online booking system.
-
Book from Brussels Midi to Berlin
Hbf and back by the overnight sleeper train.
Availability of both cheap 'Savings' fares and
fully-flexible normal fares will be shown, for each type of
seat, couchette & sleeper. You pay by credit card and print out
your own tickets in .pdf format. Easy! Note that
the prices shown on
www.bahn.de/citynightline are in euros, and are the total cost for
all passengers selected, not per person. Brussels Midi
appears as Bruxelles Midi.
-
Step 2, go to
www.eurostar.com to book your connecting Eurostar
tickets between London and Brussels, using the Eurostar
times above as a guide. By all means book an earlier
Eurostar outwards, or a later Eurostar on the way back, if
this has cheaper seats available of if you'd like to stop
off in Brussels for a while. Return fares start at
£59, for one-way fares on Eurostar
see this
advice. Eurostar tickets can be sent to any UK
address, or picked up at the station if you're travelling at
short notice or booking from overseas.
-
Step 3, now go to the German
Railways main website
http://bahn.hafas.de, and use the journey planner to
bring up the connecting Berlin-Prague trains shown in the
train times above, and buy the ticket. It will show if
any cheap special fares are available. Tickets can be sent to any address,
or in some cases printed out yourself.
How to buy
tickets by phone...
If you'd prefer
to book all these trains by phone, simply call
Deutsche
Bahn's UK office on 08718 80 80 66 (lines open 09:00-17:00 Monday-Friday, no
booking fee, £3 credit card fee), or a booking agency such
as
European Rail
on 020 7619 1083 (lines open 09:00-17:00
Monday-Friday, £25 booking fee applies).
|
|
|
|
You can easily reach anywhere in
the Czech Republic by train, travelling from London to Prague
as shown above, then using domestic
Czech trains onwards from Prague.
http://bahn.hafas.de
will give you train times within the Czech Republic, and
www.cd.cz will also give you fares. On all these
routes, trains run regularly, at least every hour or two.
Don't worry about buying a ticket in advance, just book as far
as Prague then buy an onwards ticket at the station when you
get to Prague, this is easy. There are two main stations
in Prague, Praha Hlavni (= central) near the city centre and
Praha Holosovice which is a little further out. Some
trains leave from Prague Hlavni, others from Prague Holosovice,
some serve both, so check which your train leaves from.
The sleeper trains from Frankfurt and Cologne to Prague both
stop at Prague Holosovice ten minutes or so before arriving at
Prague Hlavni, so get off at the one that's best for your
onward connection.
-
Ostrava: Prague-Ostrava
trains take about 3 hours 20 minutes, the fare is about 500 Kc
(£12). The best services are the tilting pendolino 'SuperCity'
trains, which are air-conditioned with bar car.
-
Plzen: Prague-Plzen
trains take about 1 hour 40 minutes, fare about 130 Kc (£3).
-
Brno: Prague-Brno
trains take about 2 hours 30 minutes, fare about 400 Kc (£9).
-
Cesky Krumlov:
Prague-Cesky Krumlov takes about 4 hours 30 minutes by train
with one change of train at Ceske Budejovice. The fare
is about 225Kc (£6). Alternatively, you can travel from London to Linz in Austria (see
the London to Austria page) then travel by local trains
from Linz to Cesky Krumlov (2 changes of train are normally necessary,
one at the frontier and the other at Ceske Budejovice. Use
http://bahn.hafas.de to find train times from Linz to Cesky Krumlov.
-
Karlovy Vary: Prague-Karlovy
Vary trains take about 3 hours 15 minutes, the fare is
about 275Kc (£7).
|
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Escorted tours to
Prague by train |
| |

0845 402 2069 |
| |

0845 402 2068
|
If you want a holiday to Prague by
train, but would prefer to travel with fellow travellers, a
tour manager and all the legwork done for you, there are
two companies (in fact, both part of the same group) who run
escorted tours from the UK to Prague by train, with regular departures, no airport hassles
and no whole days spent in cramped coach seats on motorways.
Seat61 gets some commission to support the site if you book
your holiday through these links or phone numbers.
Treyn Holidays
offers a 10-day tour to Vienna, Prague and Berlin from £795
per person, with 3* hotels and overland travel
by Eurostar, sleeper train and EuroCity trains. Check
details at
www.treynholidays.co.uk,
then book online or call 0845 402 2069. Great Rail
Journeys,
www.greatrail.co.uk, 0845 402 2068...
GRJ offers
a 13-day tour to Vienna, Budapest & Prague from £1,750 or a
12-day tour to Berlin, Dresden & Prague from £1,550, with 1st class train
travel and 5* or 4* hotels.
Great Rail Journeys also offer
holidays by train to other European countries. Check
the tour details online, then call 0845 402 2068 to
book or use their
online
booking form.
| |
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The Thomas Cook European Timetable
|
 The
Thomas Cook European timetable
has train & ferry times for every country in Europe, plus currency
& climate
information. Published since 1873 and costing £13.50, it's essential for any serious traveller
and an inspiration for armchair travellers. More information
on what the Thomas Cook Timetable contains. You can
buy the latest monthly edition online at
www.thomascooktimetables.com with worldwide delivery, or
buy it in person from any UK branch of Thomas Cook (ask at the
bureau de change).
Or
buy the independent traveller's edition from Amazon.co.uk:
Winter 2007/8 edition (December 2007 to June 2008) or
Summer 2008 edition (June to December 2008).
The Thomas Cook Rail Map of
Europe is the best and most comprehensive
map of train routes right across Europe, from Portugal in the
west to Istanbul, Moscow & Ukraine in the east, from Finland
in the north to Sicily & Crete in the south. High speed
&
scenic routes are highlighted. Highly recommended!
Buy online
at www.amazon.co.uk
(worldwide delivery).
See an extract from
the map.
|
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Paying
for a guidebook may seem an unnecessary expense, but it's
probably only a tiny fraction of what you're spending on
your whole trip. You will see so much more, and know
so much more about what you're looking at, if you have a
decent guidebook. The Lonely Planets and Rough Guides
are about the best out there for independent travellers.
Both have everything you need - lots of background
historical and cultural information, lots of practical
information. You won't regret buying one! My own
book, an essential handbook for train travel to Europe based
on this website called "The
Man in Seat 61", is due to be published in June 2008, and Amazon
will let you pre-order now.
Click the images to buy at
Amazon.co.uk
Or buy Lonely Planet guides from the
Lonely Planet website, with shipping worldwide.   
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Find a hotel in Prague or anywhere
else in Europe...
It's
easy to book hotels online to go with your train tickets.
Start by trying
www.laterooms.com,
just use the search form below. Laterooms
negotiates discounts for rooms booked within
3 months of travel, which makes it ideal for train travellers booking
tickets within the normal 90 days advance booking period. The
discounted prices will be shown in orange. Click on the
dates to sort results by price.
Other hotel sites worth a look...
If you don't find what you're looking for at Laterooms.com,
try these sites:
-
www.venere.com has a more personal approach than
Laterooms. On Venere, the price you see is the price you pay, no
hidden extras, and you simply pay the hotel when you get
there. After you've booked, you can change or cancel
your reservation in line with the hotel's own change and
cancellation policy.
-
www.tripadvisor.com
is a huge resource, a good place to browse for
independent travellers' reviews of the main hotels.
-
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