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UK to Riga by train or ferry...
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Riga old town, seen from the tower of the 'Petera
Baznica' church |
Riga
is a great place to visit, with
much more of a 'big city' feel than either Vilnius
or
Tallinn. There are two basic options for
travelling from the UK to Riga: overland by
train via Brussels,
Berlin, Warsaw, & Vilnius, or by train+ferry, travelling from London to Stockholm, then the
thrice weekly cruise ferry direct to Riga or
the daily overnight
cruise ferry to Tallinn in Estonia and a bus onwards to Riga.
On this page:
London to Riga by train+ferry
via Stockholm
London to Riga by train via
Berlin, Warsaw
& Vilnius
Train service within Latvia
Trains from Riga to Vilnius,
Tallinn, St Petersburg, Moscow
Sponsored links:
If you feel like a
relaxing sea voyage, you can travel from
London to Riga via Stockholm. The journey takes 3
nights, and is a great adventure. You get a day in
Stockholm, too. There's a choice of
routes from London to Stockholm: You can travel
overland by Eurostar and connecting trains via Cologne or Hamburg & Copenhagen, or you can
travel via DFDS Seaways cruise ferry from Harwich to Esbjerg
in Denmark, then intercity train to Copenhagen and the
sleeper to Stockholm. The DFDS Seaways option is a
good choice and is shown below. For details of other
options between London and Stockholm, see the London to Sweden
page. Once in Stockholm, there are direct
overnight ships to Riga every other day, or you can catch
the daily overnight ship to Tallinn and bus it from Tallinn
to Riga.
London ► Riga
(via direct cruise ferry from Stockholm):
- Day 1, travel from London to Harwich by train, leaving London Liverpool
Street at 14:18 and arriving Harwich 1 hour 25 minutes
later. Harwich International station is right next
to the ferry terminal. The train runs hourly, but
this departure gives plenty of time to catch the ferry.
Please double-check times at
www.nationalrail.co.uk.
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Sail from
Harwich to Esbjerg in Denmark aboard DFDS 'Dana
Sirena'. DFDS sails from
Harwich 3 or 4 days a week at 18:00, arriving in Esbjerg at
13:00 the next
day. See
www.dfds.co.uk
for sailing dates. A range of comfortable private
cabins is available, complete with private shower and
toilet. Take a taxi or bus to the
railway station, bus number 5 runs from the port to the
station every 20 minutes.
-
Day 2, travel from Esbjerg to
Copenhagen by modern air-conditioned InterCity
train, leaving Esbjerg town station at 14:55 and arriving in
Copenhagen at 18:18. The journey is about 175
miles, right across Denmark. You can check times
for your date of travel at
http://bahn.hafas.de.
-
Day 2 evening, travel from
Copenhagen to Stockholm overnight, leaving Copenhagen
by frequent Oresund link local train at 21:23 arriving Malmö
at 21:58 (these Copenhagen-Malmö local trains run every 20 minutes). A sleeper train leaves Malmö at 23:08
arriving Stockholm at 05:55 next morning (day 3). You
now have a free day in Stockholm. The sleeper
train has seats, couchettes (6 bunk) and sleepers (1 & 2 bed
rooms with washbasin). Alternatively,
spend the night in Copenhagen and head for Stockholm the
next day. Regular high speed tilting 'X2000' trains link Copenhagen with
Stockholm, check train times at
http://bahn.hafas.de.
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Day 3, Tallink's
'Regina Baltica' cruise ferry sails overnight from Stockholm every second
day (on odd dates, i.e. 1, 3, 5 etc of each month) at 17:00, arriving at Riga passenger port
at 11:00 the next morning (day 4 from London) - see
www.tallink.lv or
www.tallink.se for times, sailing days and fares.
Map of Riga showing ferry terminal.
London ► Riga (via
Tallinn)
-
See
the London to Estonia page for
details of the journey from London to Tallinn.
-
From
Tallinn, there are Eurolines bus departures at 10:00, 13:15,
15:00 19:00 daily, each taking about 5 hours. For
example, the ship from Stockholm arrives in Tallinn at
10:00. The 13:15 bus from Tallinn bus station calls at
Tallinn port at 13:25, and arrives in Riga (bus station) at
18:50. See www.eurolines.ee
and www.eurolines.lv
for the full timetable, fares, and an e-mail contact for
booking. These two Eurolines websites
show different buses, so be sure
to visit both!
Map of Riga.
On board DFDS
Seaways "Dana Sirena" Harwich-Esbjerg...
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Crossing the North Sea with
DFDS Seaways aboard the Dana Sirena... |
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Commodore class cabin
with double bed, TV, shower & toilet. Yes,
that's an ice bucket on the table with a half bottle
of sparkling wine.... |
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Sirena class cabin
with TV, shower, toilet & minibar. |
On board
Tallink's "Regina Baltica" Stockholm-Riga...
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Left: The Regina
Baltica now operates Tallink's Stockholm-Riga route.
A range of comfortable cabins is available, plus bars
and restaurants. |
Riga
► London (via direct cruise ferry to Stockholm):
-
Day 1, sail
from Riga to Stockholm by overnight cruise ferry. See
www.tallink.lv or
www.tallink.se
for times and sailing days of the cruise ferry from Riga passenger
port to Stockholm. The ferry normally sails from Riga
on even dates at 17:30 arriving Stockholm at 09:30. Spend day 2 exploring Stockholm.
-
Day 2, travel from Stockholm to
Copenhagen overnight, leaving Stockholm
at 23:05 by sleeper train and arriving Malmö at 06:42 next
morning. A connecting local
train leaves Malmö every 20 minutes, with one at 07:02 arriving Copenhagen at 07:37.
The sleeper train has seats, couchettes (6 bunk) and
sleepers (1 & 2 bed rooms). Alternatively, on many days there is a high
speed X2000 train leaving Stockholm at 06:20 and
arriving Copenhagen at 11:33, allowing you to spend
the night in Stockholm and travel next day (day 3) to make a
same-day
connection to Esbjerg for the ferry to England.
Check times and days of running at
http://bahn.hafas.de.
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Day 3, travel from Copenhagen to
Esbjerg by modern air-conditioned InterCity train, leaving Copenhagen at
12:30 and arriving Esbjerg at 15:24. You can
check times at
http://bahn.hafas.de. Take a bus or taxi to
the ferry terminal, bus number 5 runs from the station
to the port every 20 minutes.
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Day 3 evening, sail from Esbjerg to Harwich
aboard DFDS 'Dana Sirena', leaving Esbjerg ferry
terminal at 19:00 three or four times a week, arriving Harwich at 11:30
next day. See
www.dfds.co.uk
for sailing dates.
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Day 4, travel from Harwich to London
by train, leaving Harwich
at 13:06 and arriving London Liverpool Street at 14:33.
The train service runs hourly, you can check
times at
www.nationalrail.co.uk.
Riga ► London (via
Tallinn):
You will need to leave Riga on the 07:20 or 10:50 bus for
Tallinn to be sure of catching the 18:00 ship back to
Stockholm. Both these buses call at Tallinn port
before arriving in Tallinn central bus station. See
the London to Estonia page for
details of the return journey from Tallinn to London.
Fares:
How to buy
tickets:
-
Step 1:
Buy your Harwich-Esbjerg ferry tickets online at
www.dfds.co.uk
(no booking fee)
or by calling DFDS Seaways on 0870
5 333 000 (£10 booking fee for phone bookings).
Phone lines are open 08:30-20:00 Mondays-Fridays,
08:30-17:00 Saturdays, 10:00-16:00 Sundays.
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You can buy
your London-Harwich & Esbjerg-Copenhagen train tickets at
the station on the day of travel. No reservation is
necessary, and there's no price advantage in buying tickets
in advance. But if you want to save queuing at the
ticket office, you can buy
the London-Harwich ticket online at
www.nationalrail.co.uk and the Esbjerg-Copenhagen ticket
(with seat reservation) at
www.dsb.dk,
the Danish Railways website. This is in Danish, but
it's not difficult to work out how to use it if you're
familiar with the way such booking systems work. You
pay by credit card then print out your own ticket.
remember that Copenhagen in Danish is 'Kobenhavn'.
Alternatively, if you book by phone,
DFDS can add both UK and Esbjerg-Copenhagen tickets to your ferry fare, including
making a seat reservation on the Esbjerg-Copenhagen train.
Ask DFDS about special cheap train fares from other UK
stations to Harwich, too.
-
Step 2:
Buy the Malmö-Stockholm sleeper tickets online at
www.bokatag.se. You buy online and pick up your
tickets from the vending machines at Malmö station.
Look for the 'just-nu' special offer fares, 'just-nu'
is the name for Swedish Railways non-refundable
advance-purchase cheap deals. Bookings open 90 days before departure. A ticket for
the connecting Copenhagen-Malmö local train can easily be
bought at the ticket office for a few krone, when you get to
Copenhagen. Alternatively, you can buy tickets by email
with
www.swedenbooking.com, email
info@swedenbooking.com or call + 46 498 203380.
Tickets can be posted to UK addresses, or tickets can be
picked up by entering your booking reference into the
automatic machines at stations in Sweden, including at Malmö
and Stockholm stations. The fares shown above include
Swedenbooking's 10% surcharge over Swedish Railways' prices,
and they also charge an SEK 100 (£7) booking fee.
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Step 3: Buy the
Stockholm-Riga ferry tickets online at
www.tallink.lv or
www.tallink.se.
London - Riga via Berlin & Warsaw:
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The advantage of this route
is that it may be a bit faster (but not much!). The
disadvantage is that UK rail agents can only book you as far
as Warsaw, but can't book the leg from Warsaw to Vilnius or
the bus from Vilnius to
Riga. You will need to buy tickets when you
get to Warsaw and Vilnius, although this won't be a
problem.
London ► Riga (via Warsaw)
- Travel from London to
Vilnius by train as shown in the London to Vilnius
page.
-
Travel from Vilnius to Riga by bus or train. There are
a number of bus services daily, see www.eurolines.lv.
There is a train from Vilnius to Riga every second day, on
its way up from Ukraine. This leaves Vilnius at 12:09
on odd dates (1st, 3rd, 5th of each month, etc.), taking 5
hours. The fare is about 50 Litas (£10 or $18) for the
348 km.
A nicer way to travel than
the bus. You can check times and days of running at
www.poezda.net. There used to be an overnight
train every other day from Vilnius to Riga, but this was
withdrawn in January 2004.
Riga ► London
(via Warsaw)
-
Travel
from Riga to Vilnius by bus or train. See www.eurolines.lv
for details of the several daily buses.
There is a train from Riga to Vilnius on its way to Ukraine
which runs on alternate days, leaving Riga at 07:35 on odd
dates (1st, 3rd, 5th of each month, etc.), taking 5 hours.
The fare is about 10 Lats (£10 or $18). A nicer way to travel than the bus if
it fits your schedule. You can check times and days of
running at
www.poezda.net.
-
Travel
from Vilnius to London by train - see the
London to Vilnius page.
How to buy
tickets:
You
can book this journey from London as far as Warsaw through
Deutsche
Bahn's UK office on 08718 80 80 66 (lines
open 0900-1700 Monday-Friday, no booking fee) or www.europeanrail.com
on 020 7619 1083 (£20 booking fee, but can have more
time to help).
Then book the Warsaw-Vilnius train at the station in Warsaw
when you get there. Then book the
Vilnius to Riga bus when you get
to Vilnius.
On the
return journey, book the Riga-Vilnius bus at Riga
bus station, and the Vilnius-Warsaw train
at either Vilnius station. Deutsche Bahn
can, of course, reserve the rest of your return journey from
Warsaw back to London.
Trains link
Riga with many Latvian towns, including Daugavpils (4 trains
daily, 3-4 hours),
Krustpils, Lugai,
Tukums, Jelgava & (to be reopened from September 2008)
Venspils. The official Latvian Railways
website is www.ldz.lv,
but you'll have t use it in Latvian.
Click 'Pasaieru pārvadājumi' at the top, then
in the list below, click the timetable/route that interests
you, for example, 'Vilcienu kustības saraksts marrutā
Valga-Lugai-Valmiera-Sigulda-Rīga'. For a network
map, click 'Marrutu shēma'. However, the best source of times and fares for both trains
and buses within Latvia is
www.118.lv,
which also has an English version.
Riga ► Vilnius by bus...
There is a regular
Eurolines bus service from Riga to Vilnius, with several departures daily, fare
about 7.5 Lats (£7.50 or $14). See
www.eurolines.lt.
Riga ► Vilnius by train...
If you'd prefer a more civilised alternative
to the bus, there are comfortable but infrequent direct trains from Riga to Vilnius, on their
way to places further afield, usually running just once
every second day. In previous years, a train left Riga
on odd dates (1st, 3rd,
5th, etc., of each month) at 18:30 arriving Vilnius
at 23:33. On certain dates there was also a train from
Riga at 07:40 arriving Vilnius 12:35. Sources now
disagree about exactly what runs on what days, so check at
the station locally. You can also try
www.poezda.net.
The fare is about 10 Lats (£10 or $18) for the 348 km.
Riga ► Tallinn by bus...
There is a regular
Eurolines bus service between Riga & Tallinn, taking about 5½
hours, with regular departures through the day.
See
www.eurolines.lt.
Riga ► Tallinn by train...
It's possible to travel from Riga to Tallinn by train if you
don't mind spending the day on a couple of local trains.
-
Travel from Riga to Valga by local train, leaving Riga main
station at 06:35 and arriving Lugai at 09:39. New
from April 2008, this train now continues another 4km across
the border to Valga arriving 09:45. The fare is 2.29 Lats
(£2.60 or $5), total distance 168 km. You can check
times for this train at www.ldz.lv,
but you'll have to use it in Latvian - click 'Pasaieru
pārvadājumi' at the top, then
in the list below, click 'Vilcienu kustības saraksts
marrutā Valga-Lugai-Valmiera-Sigulda-Rīga'. For a
network map, click 'Marrutu shēma'.
Wikipedia entry on Valga.
-
Travel from Valga to Tallinn by local diesel train, leaving
Valga at 15:51 train and arriving Tallinn at 21:10.
The fare is 125 Krooni (£6 or $13).
You can check times for
this train at www.edel.ee,
though you'll have to use it in Estonian. Click
'Sõiduplaanid ja -hinnad' at top left, then
'Põhisõiduplaanid tabelitena' on the left, and note that
Tallinn-Valga is shown in two separate timetables, Tallinn-Tartu
& Tartu-Valga). For a network map, click 'kaart' at
the top.
-
For the return
Tallinn-Riga train service, see the
Estonia page.
Riga ► Moscow
There is a comfortable and safe daily
sleeper train from Riga to Moscow, the 'Latvia Express', with 2-berth sleepers & 4-berth sleepers.
To check train
times, see
www.poezda.net. This train does NOT go through
Belarus. The fare is roughly 55 euros in a 4-bed
sleeper.
Riga ► St Petersburg
There is a
comfortable and safe daily overnight sleeper train from Riga
to St Petersburg, the 'Baltya', with 2-berth and 4-berth sleepers.
To check
train times, see
www.poezda.net. This train does NOT go through
Belarus. The fare is around 50 euros in a 4-bed
sleeper.
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Make
sure you take a good guidebook. For the independent traveller, this
means either the Lonely Planet or the Rough Guide. I personally
prefer the layout of the Lonely Planets, others prefer the Rough
Guides. Both books provide a similarly excellent level of
interesting background and practical information. You won't
regret buying one of these guides..!
Click
the images to buy online at Amazon.co.uk...
Or buy direct from the
Lonely Planet website, with shipping worldwide.
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The Thomas Cook European Timetable
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 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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Find
a hotel
in Riga or anywhere else in Latvia, Lithuania or Estonia...
It's
easy to book hotels in Riga to go with your train and ferry tickets, but
there are almost too many hotel booking websites to choose
from. The answer is to use
www.hotelscombined.com, just use the search form below.
This is not a hotel booking website, but a free search tool
which searches all the main hotel booking sites for you
(Expedia, Travelocity, LateRooms, Opodo, Venere and many
others) to find the cheapest hotel rates on the net. Set
up in 2005, it's an amazing system and probably the best place
to start for booking any hotel online in any country,
worldwide.
Personal recommendation:
The
Radi un Draugi Hotel is a clean, comfortable boutique
hotel in the heart of Riga old town, from about £48 per night
for a double.
Search all major
hotel booking sites at once...
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Travel insurance & health card...
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Compare
quotes from both Direct Line & Columbus... |
Travel insurance..
Travel insurance is a boring subject, but it's a real necessity, so make sure you
budget for it. Make sure you get adequate cover -
for example, at least £1m or preferably £5m medical cover,
from a reliable insurer. Remember that an annual
multi-trip policy is often cheaper than several single-trip
policies even for just two or three trips
a year. Here are some suggested insurers to try.
Seat61 gets a small commission if you buy after clicking these
links.
If you live in the UK, get quotes from
Direct Line
(whom I've used myself) and
Columbus Direct.
If
you live in
Australia, New Zealand, Ireland or the EU, try
Columbus Direct Australia.

If you live in the USA or Canada, try
Travel Guard USA.
EU health card...
UK citizens travelling in Europe should carry a European
Health Insurance Card. This replaces the old E111 forms
as from January 2006. The EHIC card is available free
from
www.ehic.org.uk and entitles you to free or reduced rate
health care if you become ill or get injured in many European
countries, under a reciprocal arrangement with the UK's NHS.
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Back
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general page
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