The comission is planning changes to train travel in Europe to make it less of a headache for passengers.

-Single booking tickets that work across different operators.

-Passenger safety nets such as reroutings, reimbursements and compensations.

-New rules for operators and platforms to ensure fair pricings and route options.

  • madnificent@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Just based on the headline it’s nit that much different from what we get now. We already get compensated on missed connections for cross country bookings and although I get multiple tickets, I can have one booking for a long trip.

    Price and reliability have been the biggest hurdles.

    • huppakee@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      We already get compensated on missed connections for cross country bookings

      Where do you book? Afaik this is not a thing everywhere

      • madnificent@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        To my understanding there are multiple european places to shop. https://b-europe.com/ seems to work fine. It doesn’t show all options though so it’s not perfect. When you call them you could get extra options. You may want more time between connections or such and they can combine that where the online interface doesn’t.

  • rmuk@feddit.uk
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    4 days ago

    I know it’s not perfect, but I kind-of feel that Interrail is already pretty close. I know it’s meant for tourists and some operators have stand-alone booking systems, but it’s universally accepted and pretty effortless for the end user.

    • ranzispa@mander.xyz
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      4 days ago

      Interrail is a very good idea, but way too expensive; unless you perfectly plan out your trip you’re most certainly better off flying or paying for normal train rides. It can definitely be cheaper, but you’re going through 2 months of planning out the proper travel plan for that to happen.

    • timestatic@feddit.org
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      4 days ago

      But it might be more expensive than it should be for those tickets and it limits the days traveling through your own country in outbound and inbound days. Not optimal for someone living near borders and still interrail often doesn’t even have seat reservation. This needs to be booked through a different portal. Also private train operators are often not included at all which is another downside

  • Avicenna@programming.dev
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    4 days ago

    Better connection across non-major countries would be quite useful. Last time I was there it was still more plausible to pass to Slovenia from Italy via bus.

    • ranzispa@mander.xyz
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      4 days ago

      Slovenia is a very unreachable country. I remember last time I went the bus from Milan was 30€, which is not a bad price. A train would be nice, but not high priority. It would be good if they actually got any flights actually landing there.

  • vorpuni@tarte.nuage-libre.fr
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    4 days ago

    Ursula going beyond her mandate again?

    Maybe she should start being held accountable, she’s done enough damage.

  • androidul@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    orly? can you hop on a train in Germany and go to Romania? don’t think so.

    That’s the problem that needs solving: infrastructure. Then you come with the tickets.

    All this is just money laundering.

    • elmicha@feddit.org
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      4 days ago

      Of course you can. On bahn.de it showed me a connection (from Bonn to Bucuresti tomorrow) which would take 33 hours, and booking is not possible. On oebb.at it would take 28 hours, and I could book two tickets for the complete journey. I tried another day, and there oebb.at could only sell me a ticket for a part of the journey, so I would need to get back to bahn.de an book the other part there.

    • rmuk@feddit.uk
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      4 days ago

      What a weirdly specific hill to die on. There’s direct trains from Bucharest to - off the top of my head - Czechia, Poland, Turkey, Austria, Bulgaria, Ukraine… but none to Germany, so just burn the whole fucking thing down.

      • zwerg@feddit.org
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        4 days ago

        Also the point is you would be able to book a Berlin - Romania train. Yes, with a change in Czechia, but it would be a single ticket with compensation for missed connections, much like a flight.

    • zaylonOP
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      5 days ago

      Maybe the goal is a bit ambitious yes. But at least it’s promising that the Commission has recognized some very real issues with train travel in Europe and announced they are drafting a plan to fix them.

      Going across several countries by train and then experiencing a delay that disrupts your entire schedule is a miserable experience. You’re left having to contact several rail operators’ customer support channels (some of which barely offer service in a language you understand), just to maybe try and patch up your trip.

      I hope that, at the very least, they manage to implement some sort of one-ticket solution with a decent safety net.

    • tomi000@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      I currently work in IT at Deutsche Bahn and yesterday we were already discussing possible changes resulting from this.