Benelux by train

Beneluxtrain icon Belgium The Netherlands Luxembourg

Travelling around Belgium by train

Greetings! Here are some tips on travelling by train in/to/from/through Belgium. See also the home page for tips on train travel in Benelux in general; not all tips about Belgium in that page are repeated here.

Belgium is België in Dutch, Belgique in French, Belgien in German, and Belsch in Luxembourgish. The official language is Dutch in the north, French in the south, bilingually French and Dutch in Brussels, and there is also a small German area in the far east. (There are also other regional languages/dialects.) For the convenience of some of you who are not familiar with the linguistic situation in Belgium, the boundaries of these language areas, and places names in Dutch, French, and other languages are shown in the maps.

This is the webpage of the federal government of Belgium, and the tourism websites of Flanders, Wallonia, Brussels, and East Belgium. (There is no tourism organisation for the whole country.)

Passenger rail service operators

A number of companies run passenger rail services in Belgium. The following map shows the coverage of the various railway companies in Belgium (plus the Netherlands and Luxembourg).

Operators in Benelux
Train operators and their networks in Benelux

Operators of non-high-speed and semi-high-speed trains:

High-speed rail service operators:
(Unless otherwise indicated, at Brussels-Midi/Zuid ('Brussels-South') these depart from platforms 3/4/5/6, where there is often security control, but no border control.)

OUIGO is SNCF's low-cost domestic high-speed service in France. Very close to the Belgian border (less than 2.5 km) is the French station of Tourcoing (on the Kortrijk – Mouscron – Lille Flandres InterCity line), a terminus for OUIGO. Two OUIGO stations that are easily accessible from southeastern Belgium are Metz Ville and Lorraine TGV south of Luxembourg.

Types of train services

中文, 日本語

The regular non-high-speed services run every half or one or two hours. Based on their stopping patterns, there are the following types of regular non-high-speed train services:

There used to be an intermediate category called the InterRegio (IR), but this category no longer exists in Belgium.

The high-speed services are already introduced above; here are them again as one-line summaries:

The following are network maps of the regular passenger rail services in Belgium. For the convenience of people who are not familiar with the language areas in Belgium, boundaries between them are shown in the maps. Place names are given in multiple languages; the governments of the different language areas rarely make concessions to people who are not familiar with the place names in their language. Belgian trains often cross these language boundaries multiple times in one journey, and change the language used in announcements accordingly. Place names in different languages can sound and look rather different. For instance, train announcements or road signs to Luik, Lüttich, and Liège all refer to the same city.

InterCity and high-speed rail network in Benelux:

InterCity in Benelux weekdays
weekdays
InterCity in Benelux weekends
weekend and public holidays

Regular local train network in Belgium (and Luxembourg):

Regular local trains in Belux weekdays
weekdays
Regular local trains in Belux weekends
weekend and public holidays

Other than the regular trains, there are also the supplementary trains. These are time-tabled irregular train services that run in addition to the regular train services listed above. They often have routing and stopping patterns that are different from the regular services.

The following are network maps of the supplementary passenger rail services in Belgium. Included in the weekday P train map are S trains (i.e. they have S train line numbers) that are functionally P trains; they also have train numbers that begin with a 7 or 8 like P trains.

Supplementary train network in Belgium:

Weekday P trains in Belgium
weekday P trains
ICT and Sunday P trains in Belgium
ICT and Sunday P trains

You may be interested in the printed timetables of the Belgian passenger railway system, in Dutch or French; or just for the InterCity trains, in Dutch or French; or just the S trains, in Dutch or French. (They are not necessarily the most up to date; always check with NMBS/SNCB for the latest information.)

Ticketing matters

Mirroring the complexity of the Belgian railway network, there is a myriad of ticketing options in Belgium. Here I will only introduce the most-commonly encountered ticketing issues.

Channels of purchase

International tickets

NMBS/SNCB International's website and app (android, iOS) are easy to use. Other than inputting the 'from' and 'to' stations, you can also input a 'via' station for international journeys. If it can compute your desired journey, it gives you a list of possible itineraries. You choose one of them, it shows you the details of the journey, and ticket conditions. You press 'book' for the journey that you want to book. You then input your personal details. The payment methods are Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, American Express, PayPal, Bancontact (Belgian debit card), and iDEAL (Dutch bank transfer). If payment is successful, a ticket is issued. For most destinations, an e-ticket is delivered. See ticket delivery methods.

Some ticket offices/counters can handle international tickets. In 20+ stations, they offer the full range of international tickets offered by NMBS/SNCB International. In another 20+ stations, they can handle tickets to international destination(s) directly reachable from there (see here for a list of such stations). Other than purchasing tickets at a ticket counter, tickets can also be purchased via telephone. For ticket purchase at a ticket counter or via telephone, in many cases they charge a service fee of €5/€9/€14 (see here). Tickets purchased via telephone, or tickets purchased online that cannot be delivered as an e-ticket, can be picked up for free at 48 Belgian stations and 6 Dutch stations. (For tickets that can be issued as an e-ticket, but you choose to pick it up at a station, there is a handling fee of €6.)

The range of international tickets that Belgian ticket machines can handle is very small, and all of them are just across the border. Tickets to Aachen Hbf, Maastricht, and Roosendaal can be purchased from any NMBS/SNCB ticket machines in Belgium. For Luxembourg and Lille, only the ticket machines in their respective border regions sell tickets to them. (Otherwise you can purchase tickets through the other means outlined above.)

Tickets purchased from NMBS/SNCB train conductors, and fines

Domestic and some cross-border tickets can be purchased on board NMBS/SNCB trains. However, buying a ticket on board incurs a fee of €7. See that page for exceptions, the main ones are:

Go to a train conductor before they come to you. If you don't have a valid ticket and fail to buy a ticket on board, you will get a fine of €75 in Belgium. (I don't know what rules apply if you're in an NMBS/SNCB train in a neighbouring country. For instance, the usual Luxembourgish fine is €150.)

The ticket that you get from a train conductor is an RFID card (contactless card). If you need a receipt, or need to read the data of an RFID card issued to you, you can tap that card on the card reader at a Belgian ticket machine. An RFID ticket issued on board cannot be used to travel from Belgium to a neighbouring country.

Domestic tickets via the NMBS/SNCB app

At the NMBS/SNCB domestic app (android, iOS), you start by using the journey planner. If you press a suggested itinerary that is purely domestic, and involves only trains, at the bottom of the suggestion is a button which says 'buy ticket'. Check the details of the ticket: Product (i.e. ticket type), From, To, Number of passengers (1 to 6), Date, Type/Class (single/return/1st class/2nd class). 'Via' is not possible with Belgian domestic tickets: breaking of journey along the shortest route between the 'From' and 'To' stations is allowed, but if you make a detour, you have to buy two separate tickets (see below). Pressing tick on the top right corner gets you to a confirmation screen; price is also given on the same screen. Press tick again, and you'll have to input the personal details of the principle traveller: first name, last name, date of birth, and e-mail address. (Only the personal details of the principle traveller is asked.) Methods of payment are Visa, Mastercard, American Express. Only credit cards are accepted. After the transaction is succesfully processed, the ticket is stored in the app. You have to show the mobile ticket from the app in a smart phone, or tablet computer, when asked by a train conductor. The principle traveller also has to be ready to show their ID; the personal details of the principle traveller in the ticket has to match that in their ID.

Domestic and cross-border tickets via the NMBS/SNCB website

This is the domestic ticketing webpage. You fill in the journey details and the personal details of the traveller(s). The range of payment accepted are:

The delivery method is pdf, or, for a purely domestic journey, Belgians can choose to have the e-ticket recorded electronically in their Belgian national ID card (you input the ID card number before payment).

In contrast to the domestic app, which is only for domestic journeys, the domestic ticketing webpage can handle tickets between [Aachen, Eijsden, Maastricht Randwyck, Maastricht, or Roosendaal] and a station in Belgium. Just type one of these foreign station names into the 'From' or 'To' blank. The only delivery method is pdf in this case.

Domestic and cross-border tickets via Belgian ticket machines and ticket counters

Some stations have ticket counters. They sell the whole range of domestic tickets, except, e.g., internet-only tickets. The ticket counters at these stations can sell international tickets. They may charge a ticket-issuing fee for international tickets.

There are ticket machines at all Belgian stations. In Germany and the Netherlands, there are Belgian ticket machines at Aachen Hauptbahnhof, Roosendaal, Maastricht, and Maastricht Randwyck (but apparently not in Eijsden). You can choose from Dutch, French, German, and English language at the ticket machines. They take Visa, Bancontact (Belgian cards), MasterCard, Maestro, and American Express. Some also take coins.

They sell the whole range of domestic tickets (except internet-only tickets). The range of international tickets that they sell is very limited: tickets to Aachen Hbf, Maastricht, or Roosendaal on NMBS/SNCB trains can be bought from any ticket machines in Belgium; tickets for Lille on NMBS/SNCB trains, and 'anywhere in Luxembourg' tickets, can only be bought in their respective border regions. The Belgian ticket machines in the Netherlands and Germany have a somewhat restricted range of tickets on offer. For instance, the NMBS/SNCB Rail Pass, which is not valid outside Belgium, is apparently not sold there.

NMBS/SNCB ticket machine P_20180424_143456.jpg
An NMBS/SNCB ticket machine, which does not take coins; the initial screen has four language selection buttons, from left to right: NL (Dutch), FR (French), DE (German), EN (English)
initial screen P_20180424_143517.jpg
The screen after the choosing EN
single ticket screen P_20180424_143539.jpg
After pressing the 'Single ticket' button; press 'Change' if your intended origin/destination are not shown
AZERTY P_20180424_144215.jpg
Belgium uses the AZERTY keyboard layout
Passes and multi-journey tickets P_20180424_143640.jpg
After pressing the 'Passes and multi-journey tickets' button (see below)
International tickets P_20180424_143655.jpg
After pressing the 'International tickets' button (this is all this button does; you can type in Aachen/Roosendaal/Maastricht/Maastricht Randwyck/Eijsden as the origin/destination with the other tickets)
Other products P_20180424_143839.jpg
After pressing the 'Other products' button (see below)
Airport... P_20180424_143754.jpg
After pressing the 'Airport...' button: ticket for all the way to Brussels Airport, ticket for just the Brussels airport station access fee (Diabolo fee), ticket for all the way to Charleroi Airport, ticket for just the bus between Charleroi-Sud and Charleroi Airport
Maastricht P_20180425_162430.jpg
Some ticket machines at Maastricht station; from left to right, NS, Arriva, and in the background, NMBS/SNCB

Types of tickets: domestic and cross-border

There is a plethora of ticket types sold by NMBS/SNCB for domestic and short-distance cross-border journeys. Here I will only introduce the commonnest domestic tickets.

There is a whole gamma of other tickets and deals; see here.

For short-distance cross-border tickets, see Aachen Hbf, Maastricht and Roosendaal, Luxembourg, and Lille below.

Surcharges

Bicycles and pets

Fully folded up folding bicycles travel for free. Otherwise, for domestic travel and for Roosendaal/Maastricht/Aachen Hbf on NMBS/SNCB trains, a Bike Ticket (Fietsbiljet / Billet Vélo / Fahrradfahrkarte) is €5 one-way, and €8 for a day ticket (dagkaart / carte 1 jour / Tageskarte). A bicycle ticket is not valid, i.e. bicycles are not allowed to board/deboard trains, at Brussels-Central, Brussels-Chapelle/-Kapellekerk, and Brussels-Congres. Bicycles are also not allowed on the Libramont – Bastogne NMBS/SNCB bus line. See also the domestic train/bike page, domestic bike on train page (Dutch / French) and the international FAQ. (What the international page says about Aachen is perhaps not correct; when you buy a bicycle ticket for Aachen at Belgian Rail ticket machines or website, the domestic bicycle ticket is offered.) NMBS/SNCB charges €13 for bicycle carriage on international non-high-speed trains, including those to Lille and Luxembourg. (On the other hand, for Luxembourg, bicycles travel for free in CFL trains and buses; perhaps you want to cycle across the border?)

Pet Ticket (Huisdierbiljet / Billet Animal / Haustierfahrkarte) is €3 for each non-contained pet per domestic journey. Free for animals in a container 55×30×30 cm not occupying a seat. Assistance animals also travel for free, but a free pass has to be processed through an assistance animal organisation. See also the domestic Travel with your pet page (Dutch / French), and the international FAQ.

Summary of purchase channels and ticket types

NMBS/SNCB provides this summary table for the various channels of purchase and types of tickets.

Breaking, detours, zones, and fares

Breaking and detours

By default, you travel on the shortest possible route in distance between the 'from' and 'to' stations. In this case, you are allowed to break your journey: feel free to stop at an intermediate point, and join a later train to continue your journey. The ticket is valid until the last service of the day. (You are responsible for checking whether there are still services that allow you to complete the journey; make no assumptions about how late trains might run till.)

In some cases, you are allowed take a route that is not shortest in distance. However, in these circumstances, you are not allowed to break your journey (you can make the necessary train changes, but not leave the station):

Otherwise, you are not allowed to make a detour. If you want to make a detour, you have to purchase two spearate tickets. In the NMBS/SNCB journey planner, sometimes it gives you suggested itineraries with a warning saying that you have to buy two separate tickets for the suggested journey.

Zones, 'non-zones', and fares

Some stations are grouped together into 'Zones'. There are 21 such Zones in Belgium; the largest of which is the Brussels Zone, covering basically the same area as the Brussels-Capital Region. These zones are indicated in the maps above as mauve/pink polygons. Each of these Zones is a single tariff point. A ticket which has a Zone as its origin and/or destination gives the traveller, on the ticket's day of validity, free travel on NMBS/SNCB trains within that Zone until one leaves that Zone. (When purchasing a ticket, when you type in a station within a Zone, I think the resulting ticket automatically has the name of that Zone as the origin/destination.) In a Rail Pass or similar ticket, you can put down a Zone as the origin and/or destination. International rail tickets that depart from or arrives at a station within a Zone in Belgium also give the traveller free travel on NMBS/SNCB trains in that Zone until one leaves that Zone.

A ticket with Mortsel, Mortsel-Liersesteenweg, Mortsel-Oude God, or Mortsel-Deurnesteenweg as its origin/destination has equal validity in the other three Mortsel stations. However, Mortsel is not a Zone, e.g. a ticket to one of the Mortsel stations does not give limitless travel amongst the Mortsel stations.

NMBS/SNCB tickets to/from Maastricht, Maastricht Randwyck, and Eijsden cost the same, and has equal validity at the other two stations. However, Maastricht is also not a Zone. NMBS/SNCB tickets to/from these three stations usually just say 'Maastricht'.

An NMBS/SNCB return ticket from anywhere in Belgium, Roosendaal, the Maastricht stations, or Aachen Hbf to a coastal station (kuststation / gare du littoral) allows the traveller to return from another coastal station. The coastal stations are: Knokke, Duinbergen, Heist, Zeebrugge-Dorp, Zeebrugge-Strand, Blankenberge, Oostende, Veurne, Koksijde, and De Panne. Basically the entire coast is linked by the Kusttram 'Coastal Tram'. Ticketing of De Lijn, the Flemish public transport company, applies on the Coastal Tram.

Most of the points above are mentioned in the NMBS/SNCB glossary (Dutch, French).

These are the tariff tables in Dutch and French. 1 to 3 km have the same fare. For normal tickets, distances longer than 150 km are charged 150 km on NMBS/SNCB services.

Accessibility issues

This is the NMBS/SNCB disability page (Dutch / French).

Assited boarding is available at more than 130 stations. Request can be made by dialling +32 2 528 28 28, or online (domestic page, international page). Domestic requests has to be made at least 24 hours beforehand. If the trip is a direct journey between some 40 larger stations, the notice needed is reduced to 3 hours (see a list of these 40+ stations in the disability page). For international travel, request has to be made at least 48 hours beforehand. Before making an international request, TGV, Thalys, and Eurostar offer special wheelchair fares for wheelchair users and their carers. Phone +32 2 432 38 01 to make this booking.

There are various special domestic deals for people in certain categories, e.g. carers, people with visual impairment, people with hardship / lower income, and people with difficulties walking/standing.

The disability pages of the three other public transport operators in Belgium:

Other public transport operators

From the traveller's point of view, other than NMBS/SNCB, there are just three other public transport operators in Belgium:

Their networks overlap a little bit. Many Belgian buses cross into neighbouring countries, and many foreign buses cross into Belgium.

NMBS/SNCB has various subscriptions that combine travels on their trains and each of these three other public transport operators.

All four Belgian public transport operators use an RFID card called MoBIB (Dutch / French). However, for NMBS/SNCB and De Lijn, they only use (personalised) MoBIB cards for subscriptions. STIB-MIVB and TEC, on the other hand, use MoBIB cards for both subscriptions and timed tickets.

MoBIB P_20180608_154043.jpg
An anonymous MoBIB card issued by STIB-MIVB

Train deals with Germany

See what DB says about carriage of bicycles in general.

Special short-distance cross-border tickets

There is a range of tickets to Aachen Hauptbahnhof (Dutch / French) in Germany on NMBS/SNCB trains. (Aachen is Aken in Dutch, and Aix-la-Chapelle in French.) Ticket machines in Belgium and the NMBS/SNCB website (but not the NMBS/SNCB app) can handle tickets to/from Aachen Hbf on NMBS/SNCB trains (not Thalys or ICE). There are also Belgian ticket machines at Aachen Hbf. However, the range of tickets available there is smaller (e.g. the Rail Pass is apparently not available there). In the domestic NMBS/SNCB booking webpage, you just need to input Aachen as the 'from' or 'to' station. The domestic Pet Ticket and Bike Ticket are also valid for the NMBS/SNCB L train to/from Aachen. A ticket to/from Aachen can be used back-to-back with a Belgian domestic ticket on the same train. (Unless it is a ticket like Go Unlimited, which specifically says that it cannot be combined with an international ticket on the same train.) For instance, you can use an NMBS/SNCB Rail Pass up till Hergenrath near the German border, and then present another ticket between Hergenrath and Aachen Hbf, while sitting in the same Belgian train. (Terms and conditions for the standard tickets in Dutch and French.)

An interactive map of the local train lines in the state of Nordrhein-Westphalia 'North Rhein-Westphalia' (NRW) is here.

Unlike the widespread 'incursion' of German local tariffs into border areas in the Netherlands, normal German local tariffs are very rarely valid in Belgium. The Aachen regional AVV-Tarif and the state-wide NRW-Tarif are NOT valid on the NMBS/SNCB line to Aachen Hbf.

(With buses, the only bus line where local German tariff is valid for some distance in Belgium is ASEAG bus 24 between Kelmis Bruch in Belgium and Aachen Bushof in Germany. In other cases, normal German tariffs stop at the first bus stop before or after the border. Joint German–Belgian bus fare in the Aachen area is handled through region3tarif. The next two German public transport authorities to the south of AVV, VRS (Cologne/Bonn) in NRW and VRT (Trier) in Rheinland-Pfalz 'Rhineland-Palatinate', have no bus services to Belgium, although some are right on the border. The Belgian–German border area south of the Aachen region lies in the Eifel mountain range, and is very lightly populated in general.)

There is the Euregio ticket, which IS valid on the NMBS/SNCB line to Aachen Hbf, plus many other non-high-speed rail services and buses/trams in the wider Belgium/Netherlands/Germany tripoint region. See here.

Other international tickets

For ICE tickets between Belgium and Germany (or beyond), with the Sparpreis Europa saver fare, the price is said to be the same to/from any Belgian train stations; in other words, a free connecting train journey on NMBS/SNCB trains is included. Just input the actual origin and destination stations when booking an ICE ticket. See the FAQ on this from NMBS/SNCB International.

However, what NMBS/SNCB International says on this is not entirely true: NMBS/SNCB is quite generous with the Sparpreis free connecting distance that it gives from the ICE stations in Brussels and Liège, but for the western and southern extremities of Belgium, the Sparpreis can be bumped up by €10 or €20. For stations further away from Brussels or Liège, it is best to compare the price for Brussels/Liège, and the price for the intended origin/destination; if the price is different, find out at what point from Brussels/Liège the price is bumped up. The free connecting distance is not the same for all ICE services.

For a small fixed-price (€6.8?), a connecting journey on NMBS/SNCB trains can be added to a Thalys ticket to/from Germany. This fare is called 'Any Belgian Station' (ABS). Just book the entire journey through the NMBS/SNCB International website/app, or from the Thalys websites. (The Thalys website might not work for this.) The Belgian connecting ticket TO a Thalys service can be used on the day or the day before the Thalys service; for a connecting ticket FROM a Thalys service, on the day or the day after the Thalys service. See the FAQ for Thalys on this from NMBS/SNCB International.

Train deals with the Netherlands

Also read further in the Netherlands page.

Special short-distance cross-border tickets

There is a range of tickets to Roosendaal (Dutch / French) and Maastricht (Dutch / French) in the Netherlands (NMBS/SNCB tickets for 'Maastricht' covers Maastricht, Maastricht Randwyck and Eijsden, all at the same price level). Ticket machines in Belgium and the NMBS/SNCB website can handle tickets to/from these stations. (But not the NMBS/SNCB app!) There are also Belgian ticket machines at these stations in the Netherlands (but apparently except Eijsden). However, the range of tickets available from these ticket machines in the Netherlands is somewhat smaller, e.g. the Rail Pass is apparently not available. In the domestic NMBS/SNCB booking webpage, you just need to type in Roosendaal, Maastricht, Maastricht Randwyck, or Eijsden as the 'from' or 'to' station. (It is not possible to book tickets between these.) The domestic Pet Ticket and Bike Ticket are also valid on these NMBS/SNCB services. A ticket from/to Roosendaal/Maastricht can be used back-to-back with a Belgian domestic ticket on the same train. (Unless it is a ticket like Go Unlimited, which specifically says that it cannot be combined with an international ticket on the same train.) For instance, you can use an NMBS/SNCB Rail Pass up till Visé near the Dutch border, and then present another ticket between Visé and Maastricht, while sitting in the same Belgian train. (Terms and conditions for the standard tickets in Dutch and French.)

Rail Pass P_20180608_154408.jpg
Using a NMBS/SNCB Rail Pass up till Visé
Maastricht ticket P_20180608_154237.jpg
A Visé > Maastricht ticket purchased somewhere else beforehand

There is also the Euregio ticket, which is valid on many non-high-speed rail services and buses/trams in the Belgium/Netherlands/Germany tripoint region. See here.

Other international tickets

For non-high-speed train tickets between Belgium and the Netherlands, there is the Early Bird deal: a fixed discount is given (i.e. no need to book too early) if booked seven or more days before the departure date. The discount is on average 40% off full-flex for trips on Monday to Thursday, and 20% off for trips on Friday to Sunday. These discount tickets are mid-flex, i.e. it is refundable to a degree. The same deal is also given in the Netherlands for non-high-speed travel to Belgium, and to Luxembourg via Belgium. These deals are best booked online: in Belgium, ticket offices and telephone booking usually charge a booking fee; in the Netherlands, ticket machines and the normal ticket counters do not sell discounted tickets, while the international ticket offices and telephone booking charge hefty booking fees for tickets that you cannot get from ticket machines.

(However, if it is just between Belgium and Roosendaal/Maastricht, NMBS/SNCB automatically give you their better fixed-rate fare. In general, if you have to go through Roosendaal or Maastricht, see whether getting Belgian tickets to Roosendaal/Maastricht and then domestic Dutch tickets from Roosendaal/Maastricht is a better deal than getting one ticket the entire way.)

For a small fixed-price (€6.8?), a connecting journey on NMBS/SNCB trains can be added to a Thalys ticket to/from Germany. This fare is called 'Any Belgian Station' (ABS). Just book the entire journey through the NMBS/SNCB International website/app, or from the Thalys websites. (The Thalys website might not work for this.) The Belgian connecting ticket TO a Thalys service can be used on the day or the day before the Thalys service; for a connecting ticket FROM a Thalys service, on the day or the day after the Thalys service. See the FAQ for Thalys on this from NMBS/SNCB International.

Train deals with Luxembourg

Also read further in the Luxembourg page.

For Luxembourg, the distinction between the special short-distance cross-border tickets, and the other international tickets is important.

Special short-distance cross-border tickets

There is a range of special DAY RETURN tickets for short-distance cross-border traffic between Belgium and any station in Luxembourg (Dutch / French). For the standard, child, and pet tickets (children and small pets usually travel for free), these day return tickets are only available at the ticket machines and ticket counters at the following Belgian stations (see also the maps above):

(For Athus itself: Belgian domestic ticketing applies in Athus, and Luxembourgish ticketing is also extended to Athus for Luxembourgish trains/buses. At Athus you can get a Luxembourgish ticket from the CFL app or a CFL train conductor. A 2-hour ticket costs €2/€3.)

Other than the special day return tickets, there are also special monthly and annual subscriptions (Dutch / French). For people with an mPass issued by a Luxembourgish employer (see the Luxembourg page), there is a special subscription (Dutch / French). With these longer subscriptions, more destinations in Belgium are available, and buses and trams in Luxembourg are also included.

NOTE: all of these special short-distance cross-border deals between Belgium and Luxembourg CANNOT be used back-to-back with a domestic Belgian ticket in the same train! For instance, DO NOT board the IC from Luxembourg with a special Luxembourg – Arlon day return ticket, AND THEN remain in the same train pass Arlon with a domestic Belgian ticket. You are meant to: a) buy an international ticket from Luxembourg pass Arlon; b) get a full-fare international ticket from Luxembourg to Arlon, and then combine that with a Belgian domestic ticket; or c) catch another train at Arlon. (Terms and conditions for standard ticket in Dutch and French.) CFL issues nearly the same range of day return tickets and subscriptions from any station in Luxembourg to these nearby Belgian stations. They have the same rule on not combining with a Belgian domestic ticket.

Other international tickets

Otherwise you can get normal international tickets, from an international ticket office, from the NMBS/SNCB International website/app, or from the CFL website. (A full-flex Luxembourg > Arlon ticket costs a just little bit less than a special day return ticket.) Other than full-flex tickets, there are also the mid-flex tickets of youth single/return (for people 25 years or younger), and weekend return (depart on Fri/Sat/Sun, return on Sat/Sun). These give 30% off the full-flex price. Other than the mid-flex tickets, there are also the no-flex return tickets called Escapade 1/2/3: €52/74/96 second class or €86/135/180 first class for a return ticket within 30 days for 1/2/3 people between any station in Belgium and any station in Luxembourg. With these normal international tickets, you can use them in combination with another Belgian domestic ticket in the same train, unless it is a ticket like Go Unlimited, which specifically says that it cannot be combined with an international ticket on the same train. (I asked NMBS/SNCB International about this.)

Train deals with France and England

For Lille on NMBS/SNCB IC trains, the distinction between the special short-distance cross-border tickets and the other international tickets is important.

Special short-distance cross-border tickets

There are two NMBS/SNCB InterCity lines to Lille Flandres (Dutch / French). (Lille is Rijsel in Dutch.). For these two lines, there are the Trampoline 1 day ticket (Dutch / French), and the Trampoline subscription (Dutch / French). The Trampoline 1 day ticket is only available at the ticket machines and counters at:

A Trampoline 1 day ticket gives unlimited travel for 1 day on NMBS/SNCB trains on the Kortrijk – Lille Flandres line, or the Tournai – Lille Flandres line, as indicated on the ticket. The Trampoline subscription is available from more stations in Belgium.

NOTE: the Trampoline ticket, and the Trampoline subscription, cannot be used back-to-back with a domestic Belgian ticket in the same train! For instance, DO NOT board the IC from Lille Flandres with a Trampoline ticket to Kortrijk, AND THEN remain in the same train pass Kortrijk. You are meant to: a) buy an international ticket from Lille-Flandres pass Kortrijk; b) get a full-fare ticket from Lille-Flandres to Mouscron or Kortrijk, and combine that with a domestic Belgian ticket; or c) catch another train at Kortrijk. (Terms and conditions of the Trampoline 1 day ticket in Dutch and French.)

This is a map of the local train and coach lines in Hauts-de-France, and this is the official webpage of rail maps of France.

Unfortunately, other than the high-speed line and the two IC lines to Lille, the railway lines that cross the Belgian–French border either no longer have passenger services, or are mothballed, or are physically disconnected. The following are French bus operators that are based near the Belgian border (many have buses extending into Belgium).

Other international tickets

From anywhere in Belgium, there is a mid-flex return ticket called the Trampoline Weekend ticket to Lille Flandres (depart on Fri/Sat/Sun, return on Sat/Sun), which is 40% off the full-flex price. With this Trampoline Weekend ticket, I don't see a clause which says that these tickets cannot be used in combination with another Belgian domestic ticket in the same train, bar tickets like Go Unlimited that cannot be combined with an international ticket. (But do ask first if this is your intention.)

For high-speed travel between Brussels-Midi/Zuid and Lille Europe, NMBS/SNCB International has a high-speed Brussels–Lille subscription, valid on all TGV, Thalys, and Eurostar services. This can be purchased at the international ticket office at Brussels-Midi/Zuid.

For a small fixed-price (€6.8?), a connecting journey on NMBS/SNCB trains can be added to a TGV, Thalys, or Eurostar ticket to/from France or England. This fare is called 'Connection' or 'Any Belgian Station' (ABS). Just book the entire journey through the NMBS/SNCB International website/app, or from the Thalys or Eurostar websites. (The SNCF website apparently does not give this deal.) The Belgian connecting ticket TO a TGV/Thalys/Eurostar service can be used on the day or the day before the TGV/Thalys/Eurostar service; and FROM a TGV/Thalys/Eurostar service, on the day or the day after the TGV/Thalys/Eurostar service. See the FAQ for TGV, Thalys, and Eurostar on this from NMBS/SNCB International.

Between Belgium and England, there is the passenger ferry line Zeebrugge – Kingston upon Hull. An Oostende – Ramsgate service might start in 2018. Not far from Belgium are Dunkerque (Dunkirk/Duinkerke) and Calais, both with multiple sailings per day to Dover. None of these have special rail deals.

For Zeebrugge, one can apparently walk/cycle between the Zeebrugge ferry terminal and the Zeebrugge stations. However: a) I have read that the Zeebrugge port area is not very pedestrian/cyclist friendly; and b) you have to look up which of the two Zeebrugge stations (Zeebrugge-Strand and Zeebrugge-Dorp) is in use if you are heading landward, and the frequency of trains is not great. See the ferry link above for their coach service to Brugge.

Disclaimer

I do this as a hobby. I am not a travel agent; while I would be interested in questions that you might have, please direct your questions to the public transport providers involved. Situations and rules can change quickly; please check with the public transport providers for the latest information. I take utter care on the accuracy of the information I provide here, but I cannot be held responsible for any inaccuracies. If you see any doubtful information, comments are welcome: hilario.bambooradical gmail.

Unless otherwise stated, all diagrams and photos are work of mine. Please respect copyright. I apologise for the quality of the photos and videos; I hope that they are good enough for illustrative purposes.


This page in 2019
Home Be Ne Lux