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Taking your car or motorbike by train:

European motorail trains . . .

How to take your car or motorbike by motorail train from the UK to France, Germany, Italy, Spain and other countries in Europe...

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 Motorail:  Trains that carry cars...

  Motorail:  Car-carrying trains across Europe...

 Above:  French Motorail from Calais to the South of France is a painless way to get your family, car and all your luggage down to the sun...

What is Motorail?  Normal passenger trains don't carry cars or motorbikes, just passengers and their luggage and sometimes bicycles.  However, special 'Motorail' trains carry cars & motorbikes.  These run on a limited number of holiday routes, usually on certain days of the week, and usually summer-only.  They are run by several different operators.

Why use Motorail?  There are huge advantages in Motorail versus flight + car hire:  Door-to-door convenience with your own car carrying as much luggage (and toys for the kids) as you like, and you can bring back as much wine or beer as you can safely pack in!  No baggage fees or weight limits, no crowded airports, no expensive airport parking.  Think it'll take longer than flying? Think again, as overnight long-distance motorail trains are very time-effective compared with a flight, and may save a hotel bill or two as well.  Best of all, the journey becomes part of the holiday.

Motorail trains carry cars and motorbikes, and some routes (not all) can now take over-height 4x4 vehicles and people carriers.  Trailers and roof boxes can also be carried.  However, they can't carry caravans or campers.   There are now no motorail services within the UK.

On this page...

Summary of motorail services of interest to UK travellers:

Motorail trains to France

Motorail trains to Italy

Motorail to Switzerland

Taking your car to Spain

 

Motorail trains to Germany

Motorail trains to Austria

Motorail trains to Greece & Turkey

Taking your car to Scandinavia

 Map of European motorail routes  (click your destination...)

German Motorail from Dusseldorf Dutch motorail French Motorail from Calais Auto Train from Paris Britanny Ferries to Cherbourg & Caen DFDS Seaways Newcastle-IJmuiden (Amsterdam) DFDS Seaways Harwich-Esbjerg Ferries to Santander & Bilbao Ferries to Spain Optim Tours motorail Ferries from Italy to Greece Ferries from Italy to Greece Optima Tours motorail from Villach Optima Tours motorail from Villach Austrian Railways motorail from Dusseldorf German Railways motorail from Dusseldorf German Railways motorail from Dusseldorf German Railways motorail from Dusseldorf s'Hertogenbosch to Bologna by Auto Slaap Trein s'Hertogenbosch to Bologna by Auto Slaap Trein German Railways Motorail from Dusseldorf German Railways Motorail from Dusseldorf Auto Train Paris-Geneva Auto Train from Paris French Motorail from Calais French Motorail from Calais French Motorail from Calais French Motorail from Calais French Motorail from Calais French Motorail from Calais Auto Train from Paris Auto Train from Paris Optima Tours motorail Austrian Railways motorail Auto Train from Paris French Motorail from Calais

Sponsored links:

 

 

 Motorail trains to France:

French Motorail from Calais:  Calais to Avignon, Fréjus, Nice, Brive, Toulouse, Narbonne...

French Motorail (www.raileurope.co.uk/frenchmotorail) is a painless way to get your family, car and all your luggage from the UK to the South of France.  Or Italy or Spain, too, as Narbonne & Nice a short drive away from the Spanish or Italian borders.  One train runs overnight from Calais to Avignon, Fréjus (for St Tropez) & Nice (handy for the Italian Riviera).  Another runs overnight from Calais to Brive, Toulouse & Narbonne (handy for the Spain's Costa Brava).  They operate from mid-May to mid-September, southbound on Friday nights (also Sunday nights from late July to late August), northbound on Saturday nights (also Monday nights from late July to late August).  The price includes exclusive private use of a whole 6-berth or 4-berth couchette compartment and continental breakfast at your destination (1- & 2-bed sleepers were withdrawn from French Motorail trains in January 2006).  Who uses French Motorail?  Families, couples, and bikers, to name three typical groups, and it has its loyal customers who come back year after year.  The bar car on the Calais-Nice motorail is described by one train manager as "Somewhere you can find Lord So-and-So chatting away to a leather-jacketed Harley Davidson Biker".  French motorail carries motorbikes, normal cars and many 4X4 and MPVs (maximum vehicle height 1.80 metres), for example Land Rover Freelanders & Volkswagen Tourans but not very tall vehicles such as Land Rover Discoveries, campers or vans.  Dogs and other pets are not carried on French motorail trains.  'French Motorail' is a subsidiary of Rail Europe, itself a UK-managed subsidiary of SNCF (French Railways).  French Motorail contracts with SNCF to run the trains and provide the wagons and coaches.

Cost:  One price covers the car, driver and all car passengers, it varies between £340 & £590 each way depending on your destination and date of travel.  Ferry crossing not included.

How to buy tickets:  For dates, times, prices & online booking see www.raileurope.co.uk/frenchmotorail or call Rail Europe's Motorail line on 0844 848 4050 (lines open 0900-1700 Monday-Friday) French Motorail can also arrange your Channel Crossing either by Eurotunnel or ferry, at special rates.

What's travelling with French Motorail like?

Taking the ferry from Dover to Calais to pick up the motorail to the South of France...   Checking in at the motorail terminal in Calais...   Motorail terminal, Calais

1. Crossing the Channel:  You cross the Channel around lunchtime, either by ferry or Eurotunnel.  French Motorail can arrange this at special rates.  It's then a few minute's drive to the French Motorail terminal in central Calais - you'll find a map in your documentation...

 

2. At the Motorail terminal:  You're met at the entrance gate by a Rail Europe rep who explains everything and places a sticker on your car indicating its destination.  They give you a label for your car keys - remember to take a spare set of keys just in case...  Check-in for the train to Avignon, Fréjus & Nice is 15.20-17.30, check-in for the train to Brive, Toulouse & Narbonne is 17.55-20.00.

 

3. Park anywhere you like and drop your passengers off at the terminal building along with your overnight bags.  Remember not to leave any valuables in the car.  In the terminal there's a cafe, toilets, baby changing room, and you can buy wine & a (pre-ordered) picnic box for the journey.  You can also pre-book an early dinner in the terminal's restaurant.  There's a children's play area outside with slide.

Checking the cars before loading...   Cars are loaded onto the motorail train by SNCF (French Railways) staff...   Boarding the French Motorail train from Calais to Avignon, Frejus, Nice...

4. Loading the car:  You now drive your car to the loading checkpoint on the far side of the car park, where there's a brief car condition check.  Put the aerial down!  You sign the condition form...

 

5. You then drive a few hundred yards further on to the actual car loading area.  You park your car in front of the ramps and leave the keys in the ignition.  SNCF staff load the car onto the car-transporters.  You walk back to the terminal, or hop on the shuttle minibus.  Have a coffee, and buy that bottle of wine for the trip!

 

6. Boarding the train:  The Avignon/Fréjus/Nice train leaves at 18:05, the Brive/Toulouse/Narbonne train at 20:40.  The train becomes available for boarding about 20 minutes before departure.  The platform is reached via steps & a subway from the auto-train terminal.

First class couchette compartment on French Motorail, berths folded away...

Above:  A 1st class 4-berth couchette compartment, with berths folded away for evening & morning use...

  First class couchette compartment, with the berths folded out...

Above:  The same 1st class couchette compartment, with the berths folded out...

  A more basic 2nd class couchette compartment

A 2nd class 6-berth compartment...

7. On board the train:  You and your family get sole occupancy of a whole couchette compartment, either a 1st class 4-berth one or a 2nd class 6-berth one.  Believe it or not, French Motorail don't distinguish between classes, and there's no difference in price - if there's 5 or 6 people in your car, you'll get a 2nd class 6-berth compartment, if there's 1-4 people in your car you'll probably get a 1st class 4-berth compartment, but if it's busy and you've booked late, you may end up with a 2nd class one.  The 1st class compartments are looking a bit tired, perhaps, but are actually pretty spacious & comfortable.  The 2nd class ones are much more basic.  How can you tell which class you're booked in?  The 1st class cars are normally numbered 11-14, the 2nd class ones 15-18.  "CO4AV/12/4" on your booking documents means car 12, compartment 4, which in this case would be one of the 1st class cars.  Whichever class of couchette you get, a pillow and lightweight sleeping bag are provided for each passenger, along with a small bottle of mineral water.  There's a bar car, selling tea, coffee and half bottles of wine - if you've still forgotten to get one!  There's no food in the bar car, so remember to bring your own picnic, or pre-order one of the picnic boxes picked up from the Motorail terminal.  Enjoy the evening on the train with your family as northern France swishes by...

The bar car on the French Motorail train from Calais to the South of France.   The Calais-Nice Motorail train, drizzling Calais exchanged for the sweltering South of France next morning!   Breakfast is served while the cars are unloaded from the train.

Above:  The bar car, serving tea, coffee, half bottles of wine (but not food, so take your own).

 

8. Next morning:  Wake up in the South of France to great scenery, and head for the bar car to get a morning coffee...  Here, the Calais-Nice motorail is between Marseille & Fréjus.

 

9. Arrival & unloading:  On arrival, a continental breakfast is served at the motorail terminal (included in the price) while your car is unloaded by SNCF staff.  This is Fréjus.  It's all pretty relaxed!

Auto-Train from Paris  to Nice, Geneva, Avignon, Biarritz, Marseille, Tarbes, Narbonne, St Raphael, Toulon, Toulouse

The French Railways also operate their own domestic car-carrying trains, called Auto-Train, some of which run all year round at least a few times a week.  In this case, cars & passengers travel separately:  You check your car in during day 1, the cars are transported overnight, and you pick your car up on day 2.  Passengers travel on any regular passenger train they like, either a daytime TGV or overnight train with couchettes. 

Cost:  Paris-Nice costs around £220 each way for the car, Paris-Narbonne £205, Paris-Brive or Paris-Bordeaux £155.  Passengers pay normal rail fares, see www.raileurope.co.uk.

How to book:  In the UK, call Rail Europe's Motorail line on 0844 848 4050 (lines open 0900-1700 Monday-Friday).

AutoSlaapTrein from s'Hertogenbosch to Avignon

If you live in the North of England, Scotland or East Anglia, this Dutch motorail service can be useful as there are direct ferries from Newcastle, Hull or Harwich to Holland.  Run by a private Dutch company, www.autoslaaptrein.nl, it operates weekly between June & September from s'Hertogenbosch (in the middle of the Netherlands, a short drive from the Channel ports of Hoek van Holland or Rotterdam) to Avignon.  The train runs overnight with couchettes (4 & 6-berth) and private sleepers (1, 2 & 3 bed) southbound on Friday nights, northbound on Saturday nights.  Their website is currently only in Dutch, but you can contact them for details, or book in the UK through www.railsavers.com on 01253 59 55 55, lines open 09:00-17:00 Monday-Saturday, 10:00-16:00 Sunday.  For ferries from Harwich (East Anglia) to Hoek van Holland, see the seat61 Ferry Shop or www.stenaline.co.uk.  For the overnight cruise ferry from from Hull to Rotterdam, see www.poferries.com.  For the overnight cruise ferry from Newcastle to IJmuiden (Amsterdam), see www.dfds.co.uk.  It's only a short drive from any of these ports to s'Hertogenbosch.

 Motorail trains to Italy:

Unfortunately, there are no direct motorail trains from Calais or Paris to anywhere in Italy, in spite of high demand.  But you can drive to Holland or Düsseldorf and take the motorail to Italy from there, or take the Calais-Nice motorail and drive the rest of the way.  Each of these options is described below.

Option 1:  Düsseldorf to Verona or Alessandria by German Railways motorail:  DB AutoZug

Düsseldorf is a 4-hour drive (245 miles) from Calais, or a 2 hours 40 minute drive (157 miles) from Hoek van Holland or Rotterdam.  German railways (Deutsche Bahn) run excellent motorail trains from Düsseldorf to Verona & Alessandria in Italy.  The trains run overnight with both couchettes & sleepers plus a bistro-restaurant car.  Some deluxe sleepers even have private shower & toilet.  Prices start from as little as 149 euros (£108) one-way for car & driver with couchette sleeping berth on the train if you book online in advance and corner a cheap deal.  Dogs can be carried, too.

  • The Düsseldorf-Alessandria motorail runs every Sunday night from March until October, loading 15:40-16:10, departing 16:54 arriving 07:45 next morning.  For online booking, see the DB AutoZug website.

  • The Düsseldorf-Verona Motorail train runs every Friday night in April then on Friday & Sunday nights from May to October, loading 16:15-16:45, departing 17:54 and arriving 09:55 next morning.  For online booking, see the DB AutoZug website.

  • For ferry connections, see www.poferries.com for Dover-Calais or Hull-Rotterdam, www.stenaline.co.uk for Harwich-Hoek van Holland, or www.dfds.co.uk for Newcastle-IJmuiden (Amsterdam).

DB UK_468x60__Autozug_general

Option 2:  Calais to Nice by French Motorail, then a short drive to Italy...

The overnight Calais to Nice motorail train can take the strain out of a long drive to Italy, see the France section above or www.raileurope.co.uk/frenchmotorail.  Nice is 33 miles' drive from San Remo, 119 miles from Genoa, 190 miles from Cinque Terre, and 258 miles from Florence.

Option 3:  Netherlands to Livorno or Bologna by Dutch motorail:  www.autoslaaptrein.nl

A private Dutch company, www.autoslaaptrein.nl, runs an excellent weekly motorail train from s'Hertogenbosch in the Netherlands to Bologna & Livorno in Italy, running every Friday southbound, every Saturday northbound between early June & early September.  s'Hertogenbosch is 60 minutes drive from Hoek van Holland or Rotterdam, 3 hours drive from Dunkirk or Calais.  The train runs overnight with shared couchettes (4 & 6-berth) and private sleepers (1, 2 & 3 bed with washbasin), and a host/hostess in charge of each car.  A complimentary aperitif is served on boarding, then there's a restaurant car offering two sittings for dinner then acting as 'club car' until midnight.  Small pets (up to about 12Kg) can also be carried, as long as your party occupies a whole compartment.  Maximum height of vehicles carried 1.68m, so some 4x4 and larger MPVs can't be transported.

Cost:  Prices start at around 510 euro (£408) one-way for car & 2 passengers in 6-berth couchettes, rising to 909 euros (£727) one-way in high season with a private 2 or 3 bed sleeper.

How to buy tickets:  The Autoslaaptrein website is currently only in Dutch, but you can contact them for details, or book in the UK through www.railsavers.com on 01253 59 55 55, lines open 09:00-17:00 Monday-Saturday, 10:00-16:00 Sunday.  Book early as this train is popular and often leaves fully booked.

Ferry connections:

  • For ferries from Harwich (East Anglia) to Hoek van Holland, see the seat61 Ferry Shop or www.stenaline.co.uk.

  • For the overnight cruise ferry from from Hull to Rotterdam, see www.poferries.com.

  • For the overnight cruise ferry from Newcastle to IJmuiden (Amsterdam), see www.dfds.co.uk

  • It's only a short drive from any of these ports to s'Hertogenbosch.

Traveller Stephen Powell reports on a motorail journey from Livorno to s'Hertogenbosch with www.autoslaaptrein.nl in 2008"Ticket booking through Rail Savers was fine though a little delayed, as we didn’t get sent the tickets until 2 days before we departed.  I gather this was due to a delay with the rail company, not Rail Savers, though it's definitely good to keep on top of this.  The station in Livorno is clearly sign posted and easy to find.  It was clear where to go in the station and the process of boarding the train in the car was very well organised.  All the staff spoke English and were very helpful on the train.  Getting off the other end was equally efficient.  One thing I would say is think hard about whether to eat in the restaurant car.  We paid nearly £30 a head for a meal that was little better than the free meal in Eurostar first class, plus this did not include any drinks at all, even water, and it was 17 Euros for a bottle of wine on top.  Although it's nice to spend and hour or two in the restaurant you can always have a drink there after the last dinner sitting (9pm ish).  It wasn’t made clear that we were entitled to a free dinner in our compartment [actually a simple dish & aperitif served on departure] had we not paid for the restaurant meal, which we did not receive because we were in the restaurant car."

Car-carrying trains within Italy...

Motorail trains carrying passengers' cars operate on many routes within Italy, including Bologna-Palermo & Bologna-Catania (Sicily) daily year-round, Turin-Bari weekly all year and daily in summer, Bolzano-Bari weekly year-round, Rome-Sicily weekly, and many summer-only routes.  See www.trenitalia.com and to book in the UK contact motorail experts www.railsavers.com (01253 595555).

 Taking your car to Spain:

Calais or Paris to Spain...

There are no motorail trains from Calais or Paris to anywhere in Spain. 

Calais to Narbonne by French Motorail, then a short drive to Spain...

The Calais to Narbonne motorail train can take the strain out of a long drive to Spain, see the France section above or www.raileurope.co.uk/frenchmotorail.  Narbonne is 77 miles from the Spanish frontier, or 157 miles from Barcelona.

Ferries from the UK to Spain:

Portsmouth-Bilbao:  www.poferries.com

Plymouth-Santander:  www.brittany-ferries.co.uk

You may prefer to take a direct cruise ferry from the UK to Spain.  www.poferries.com sail Portsmouth-Bilbao and www.brittany-ferries.co.uk sail Plymouth - Santander, all year-round.  Both companies have excellent ships, making for an enjoyable voyage, complete with whale-watching in the Bay of Biscay...  You can also book all these routes through the Seat61 Ferry Shop.  There are also kennel facilities on board for dogs.

Car-carrying trains within Spain:

Motorail trains within Spain were all suspended in 2006 and are not currently running at all.  They may resume in 2008, but there are no signs of this yet.  However, if and when operating, routes include Santander-Madrid overnight daily except Saturdays from July to September, Bilbao-Alicante overnight on Fridays all year, Bilbao-Malaga overnight on Fridays all year (3-weekly in summer), Madrid-Algeciras (for Gibraltar or Morocco ferry) daily overnight year-round, and Madrid-Malaga daily except Saturdays all year.  See www.renfe.es and contact UK motorail specialists www.railsavers.com on 01253 59 55 55 (lines open 09:00-17:00 Monday-Saturday, 10:00-16:00 Sunday) or Renfe agents www.spanish-rail.co.uk.  Car transport costs around 80-140 euros one-way depending on the length of the journey, excluding driver & passengers who pay the regular fares.

 Motorail trains to Switzerland:

Apart from a 3-times-weekly Paris-Geneva 'Auto-Train' service in summer, there are no motorail trains to Switzerland, the only option is to drive from the channel ports all the way.

 Motorail to Germany:

There are no motorail trains from Calais to anywhere except southern France.  However, there are motorail trains within Germany and Austria that may help, for example Hildesheim (near Hanover) to Munich.  You can check routes and book German motorail trains online at the DB AutoZug website.

 Motorail to Austria:

German Railways motorail:  Düsseldorf to Innsbruck, Salzburg, Villach...

Düsseldorf is a 4-hour drive (245 miles) from Calais, or a 2 hours 40 minute drive (157 miles) from Hoek van Holland or Rotterdam.  German railways (Deutsche Bahn) run excellent motorail trains from Düsseldorf to Innsbruck, Salzburg & Villach in Austria.  The trains run overnight with both couchettes and sleepers plus a bistro-restaurant car.  Prices start from as little as 149 euros (£108) one-way for car & driver with couchette sleeping berth on the train if you book online in advance and corner a cheap deal.  Dogs can be carried, too.

  • The Düsseldorf-Salzburg motorail runs every Sunday night from February until October, loading 17:50-18:10, departing 18:54 and arriving Salzburg at 06:00 next morning.  For online booking, see the DB AutoZug website.

  • The Düsseldorf-Innsbruck Motorail train runs every Friday night in February & March then on Wednesday nights from April to October, loading 19:50-20:10, departing 21:02 and arriving Innsbruck at 07:20 next morning.  For online booking, see the DB AutoZug website.

  • The Düsseldorf-Villach Motorail train runs every Friday night in February, March, April then on Wednesday & Friday nights from May to September, then Fridays in October, loading 17:40-18:10, departing 18:54 and arriving Villach at 09:26 next morning.  For online booking, see the DB AutoZug website.

  • For ferry connections, see www.poferries.com for Dover-Calais or Hull-Rotterdam, www.stenaline.co.uk for Harwich-Hoek van Holland, or www.dfds.co.uk for Newcastle-IJmuiden (Amsterdam).

DB UK_468x60__Autozug_general

Austrian Railways motorail:  Düsseldorf to Vienna by ...

Austrian Railways (ÖBB) run a Düsseldorf-Vienna overnight motorail train for most of the year, daily at peak times, twice weekly off-peak (Fri & Sun nights southbound, Thurs & Sat nights northbound).  Departs Düsseldorf 20:15, arrives Vienna Westbahnhof 09:07.  Car transport costs 89 euros each way, passengers pay the normal rail fares and travel in a sleeper or couchette.  See http://www.oebb.at/pv/de/Rund_ums_Reisen/Autoreisezug/Deutschland/ (or if this link stops working, navigate from the www.oebb.at home page).  If you can cope with German, there's online booking.  Alternatively, to book in the UK (in English!) contact motorail experts www.railsavers.com (01253 595555).

 Taking your car to the Netherlands:

There are no motorail services from the UK to Holland & the Netherlands, but there are ferries.

Harwich-Hoek van Holland...

www.stenaline.co.uk sail from Harwich in Essex to Hoek van Holland near Rotterdam with both a daytime and an overnight crossing, cabins available.

Newcastle-IJmuiden (Amsterdam)...

www.dfds.co.uk sail from North Shields (Newcastle) overnight to IJmuiden (the port of Amsterdam), cabins available.

Hull-Rotterdam...

P&O (www.poferries.com) sail from Hull to Rotterdam overnight, cabins available.

 Motorail to Slovenia, Croatia, Greece, Turkey:

Motorail trains to Slovenia & Croatia...

The Düsseldorf - Villach motorail service will get you from Düsseldorf (a 4 hour drive from Calais or a 2 hour 40 minute drive from Hook of Holland or Rotterdam) to Villach in southern Austria, a stone's throw from the Slovenian border, from where you can easily drive to Ljubljana, Zagreb, Split or Rijeka, see the Motorail to Austria section above.  There are now no direct motorail trains to Croatia.

Motorail trains to Greece & Turkey:  www.optimatours.de

If you are travelling further afield, Optima Tours run Motorrail trains from Villach in southern Austria to Bulgaria, Macedonia (Skopje), Greece (Thessaloniki), and Turkey (Edirne), with departures on various dates from May to October.  See www.optimatours.de for dates, times and booking information.

Ferries to Greece...

Car ferries operate from Venice, Ancona, Bari, or Brindisi in Italy to Corfu, Igoumenitsa & Patras in Greece, try www.superfast.com, www.bluestarferries.com, www.minoan.gr.  Or use the Seat61 ferry shop for a summary of all main routes with online booking.  See above for information about the weekly motorail trains from Germany or the Netherlands to Italy. 

 Taking your car to Scandinavia:

There are no motorail trains to Scandinavia, but direct car ferries link the UK with Denmark several times a week, all year round, see www.dfds.co.uk.

Once in Denmark, there's a daily overnight ferry from Copenhagen to Oslo in Norway, which can also be booked at www.dfds.co.uk.

 

 

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