Overnight train: London to Berlin
I can't find any overnight trains from London to Berlin. Only ones that have a bunch of connections, which would mean I would have to travel during the day. Is this actually the case?
Best Answer
Loco2 - loco2.com, which is my company, has worked hard to make booking this route as easy as possible. We combine Eurostar trains with the City Night Line sleeper train from Paris so that you can easily book all in one go. We also offer other options via Brussels if you want to look at day trains as well.
All the prices are the same as booking directly with Eurostar, SNCF or Deutsche Bahn. The combinations offered on Loco2 can't be found anywhere else because of the way that we've built our software (you can book each portion separately elsewhere but you'd need to manually combine the different searches as suggested by Seat 61).
Sorry to sound like a bit of an advert! Hope that's helpful, and I'm happy to answer any more questions about Loco2 or any other aspect of how best to book London to Berlin trains.
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How long does it take from London to Berlin by train?
It takes an average of 13h 26m to travel from Berlin to London by train, over a distance of around 576 miles (927 km). There are normally 13 trains per day travelling from Berlin to London and tickets for this journey start from \u20ac75.90 when you book in advance.Does Eurostar go from London to Berlin?
Travelling from London to Berlin by train In around nine hours, Eurostar and ICE high-speed trains can transport you to the centre of Berlin, so you'll be able to start sightseeing straight away.Is there a direct train from Berlin to London?
No, there are no direct train services from Berlin to London. Travelling from Berlin to London by train will require a minimum of 2 changes.Do trains run overnight UK?
There are two main overnight services in the UK: 1. The Caledonian Sleeper between London and Scotland and 2. The Night Riviera between London and Cornwall.Berlin - London by High-Speed Train in First Class (Eurostar)
More answers regarding overnight train: London to Berlin
Answer 2
There are currently no sleeper services operating through the Channel Tunnel, so no sleeper services between the UK and Europe. They originally planned to run some, and had the Nightstar trains built, but for various reasons detailed on the wikipedia article they never ran. I believe you can try the rolling stock if you go to Canada!
So, short answer - there's no sleeper rail service between Berlin and London
The every brilliant Seat 61 page on the journey lists your main options. If the sleeping bit is important, opt for a train to the Netherlands then change for Hook of Holland, then take the overnight ferry to Harwich. Those have nice comfy beds, small but decent showers, wifi, restaurants etc. You'll sleep much better on that than you would've done on most sleeper trains!
Otherwise, if you want to spend most of your time sleeping on a train, then you'd probably need to take the Berlin <-> Paris sleeper, and change to a Eurostar. Seat 61 has the details on the daytime option via the Eurostar + daytime trains via Brussels or Paris.
Oh, and if you're googling for other options, you may see references to a sleeper Berlin <-> Brussels with a Eurostar connection, or a sleeper Paris <-> Berlin with Eurostar connection. The Brussels-Berlin used to offer excellent timings, and was good to take, but most annoyingly it hasn't run for a number of years now and is apparently unlikely to restart (disputes between DB and SNCB over track charges I believe). The Paris-Berlin sleeper wasn't quite as good timings-wise, but sadly has stopped running as well.
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