Germany - General Information: Difference between revisions

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Deutsche Bahn AG ([http://www.deutschebahn.com DB]).  
Deutsche Bahn AG ([http://www.deutschebahn.com DB]).  
===National Railway Operator===
===National Railway Operator===
Deutsche Bahn AG is a company wholly owned by the German government. It functions through a large number of subsidiary companies. The principal ones, responsible for railway operations in Germany, and their particular activities are:
Deutsche Bahn AG (DBAG) is a company wholly owned by the German government. It functions through a large number of subsidiary companies. The principal ones responsible for railway operations in Germany are:


* DB Fernverkehr AG: InterCity and other long-distance passenger services
* DB Fernverkehr AG: Long-distance (''IC/ICE'') passenger services, also operation of ''EC'' and most other international services within Germany.
* DB Regio AG: Local passenger services
* DB Regio AG: Local and regional passenger services. DB Regio is split into regional divisions and also owns various subsidiary rail and bus passenger companies, almost all of which bear DB branding.
* DB Vertrieb GmbH: Passenger marketing and sales
* DB Vertrieb GmbH: Retail sales and systems
* DB Cargo Deutschland AG: Freight services
* DB Cargo Deutschland AG: Freight services
* DB Netz AG: Infrastructure
* DB InfraGO AG: Infrastructure (since 27 December 2023 when it was formed by a merger or the former DB Netz and DB Station&Service entities)
* DB Station&Service AG: Stations
* DB Fahrzeuginstandhaltung GmbH: Maintenance


DB Regio AG has numerous wholly-owned subsidiaries including many bus companies and:
DBAG has many interests in other countries, although it sold its Arriva subsidiary which operated passenger rail and bus services outside Germany  to a private equity firm for an undisclosed sum in June 2024.


* DB RegioNetz Verkehrs GmbH
Subsidiaries of DB Cargo AG in Germany include RBH Logistics GmbH and an 80% holding in Mitteldeutsche Eisenbahn (MEG). Outside Germany it has 100%-owned subsidiaries in several European countries under the DB Cargo name, and part-ownership of several railfreight firms such as Transfesa.
* DB ZugBus Regionalverkehr Alb-Bodensee GmbH
* S-Bahn Berlin GmbH
* S-Bahn Hamburg GmbH
* Vorpommernbahn GmbH


DB Regio AG is also part owner of numerous other transport companies. Most DB local train services are the responsibility of DB RegioNetz Verkehrs GmbH.
===Other Operators===
 
====Long-distance services====
 
There has been only limited success with open-access long-distance passenger services in competition with DB. The following operators run trains within Germany or to neighbouring countries:
 
* Flixtrain, a subsidiary of German long-distance coach operator Flixbus, runs various long-distance trains within Germany. PDF timetables and a route map are available [https://www.flixtrain.com/train-lines here]. Note that both flixtrain.com and flixtrain.de redirect to the Flixbus site so this link must be used. There are generally one or two trains each way on certain days only on each route. Timetables change frequently. Other than the core Stuttgart to Berlin and Hamburg to Köln services, routes and stations served are also subject to frequent changes, additions and withdrawals.
 
* Abellio Rail Mitteldeutschland runs the ''Harz-Berlin Express'' on summer weekends only between Berlin and Goslar/Thale Hbf, having taken over from Transdev in 2018.
 
* [https://www.snalltaget.se/en Snälltåget] (a subsidiary of Transdev) operates overnight trains between Berlin, Malmö and Stockholm for most of the year.
 
* [https://www.rdc-deutschland.de/rdc-deutschland RDC Deutschland] subsidiary BahnTouristikExpress operates a Hamburg-Lörrach overnight car-carrying service in the summer months, marketed as ''BTE AutoReiseZug'', and the seasonal weekend-only ''Alpen-Sylt Nachtexpress'' overnight service between Salzburg and Westerland (Sylt). RDC subsidiary RDC Autozug Sylt GmbH operates a car-carrying service between Niebüll and Westerland (Sylt) in competition with DB.
 
* [https://urlaubs-express.de/?lang=en Urlaubs-Express] operates Motorail services in the winter from various cities in northern Germany to München and ski resorts in Austria, and in the summer to München, Lörrach, Innsbruck and Verona. Passengers without cars are also carried.
 
* Eurostar (re-branded from Thalys in 2024) operates high-speed services between Paris, Brussel/Bruxelles and Köln, with occasional services extended to the Ruhr. This is a division of Eurostar Group which also operates passenger services through the Channel Tunnel and is mainly owned by the French and Belgian national railways SNCF and SNCB/NMBS.
 
*[https://westbahn.at/en WESTbahn (WESTbahn Management GmbH)]: The first open access operator in Austria, WESTbahn runs trains from Wien Westbahnhof into Germany on the Salzburg Hbf – München Hbf route. From 15 December 2024, one train pair has been extended from München Hbf to Stuttgart.
 
====Local services====
 
Local and regional services are tendered by regions (''Länder'') in lots comprising a particular area or network, usually for a period of between two and twelve years. As a result, over the years an increasing number of services have become operated by companies other than DB Regio, to the extent that DB Regio-operated trains are a rarity in quite a few areas.
 
These non-DB companies are often owned by the ''Land'' concerned (for example HLB in Hessen and SWEG in Baden-Württemberg), or by the state railways of other countries including the Netherlands (Abellio), Austria (Arverio) or Italy (various brands within the Netinera group), or they can be completely private companies, often foreign (for example National Express (UK) or Transdev (France)).


==Language==
==Language==
German
German.
 
Upper and Lower Sorbian are Slavic languages spoken in the areas around Bautzen and Cottbus respectively. They appear alongside German on station nameboards in these areas.
 
North Frisian is a minority language spoken in the north-west of Schleswig-Holstein. Station nameboards in this area are also bilingual.


==Currency==
==Currency==
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==UIC codes==
==UIC codes==
* Deutsche Bahn AG: numeric 80, alpha DB.  
* Deutsche Bahn AG: numeric 80, alpha DB.  
* Ahaus Alstätter Eisenbahn GmbH and Bentheimer Eisenbahn AG: numeric 68, alpha AAE.


The former Deutsche Reichsbahn code was 50, but this will now be seen only on withdrawn or museum vehicles.  UIC code 50 now applies to ŽFBH, the railway of the Muslim-Croat Federation of Bosnia-Hercegovina.
Other companies operating on DB InfraGO AG (formerly DB Netz) tracks in Germany also use numeric code 80 but each has its own individual alpha code.
 
The former Deutsche Reichsbahn code was 50, but this will now be seen only on withdrawn or museum vehicles.


==Timetable==
==Timetable==
===Journey Planner===
===Journey Planner===
*PC: [http://reiseauskunft.bahn.de/bin/query.exe/en reiseauskunft.bahn.de/bin/query.exe/en]
*PC/laptop: [https://reiseauskunft.bahn.de/bin/query.exe/en DB Journey Planner]
*Mobile Phone: [http://www.bahn.de/p/view/buchung/mobil/mobile-apps.shtml DB Navigator] (for iPhone, Blackberry, Android etc.)
*Smartphone: [https://int.bahn.de/en/booking-information/db-navigator DB Navigator]
 
===Actual Train Times===
* [https://www.zugverfolgung.com/db-deutsche-bahn Zugverfolgung.com] Note that this site seems to offer tracking for Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands and Switzerland as well.
* The DB-operated [https://www.bahnhof.de/ bahnhof.de] site offers live departure and arrival information for all stations in Germany.
* [https://bahn.expert/ BahnExpert] and [https://dbf.finalrewind.org/ DBF] are two unofficial sites offering live departure and arrival information.


===Downloadable Timetable===
===Downloadable Timetable===
[http://kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe/d.&rt=1&mainframe=tab_main kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe/d.&rt=1&mainframe=tab_main]
[http://kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe http://kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe]
 
If the table number is known, it can simply be inserted in the ''Kursbuchstreckennummer'' search box at top left.


This gives options to search by:
Otherwise, use one of the buttons in the left-hand column:
* Bahnhof/Halt (Station/Halt)
* Liniennummer (Line Number. Note this is '''not''' the table number, but the ''S-Bahn'' line number)
* Kursbuchstreckennummer (Timetable table number)
* Zugnummer (Train number e.g. IC 1234)


Alternatively, click on "Tabellenübersichten" in the left hand column. This contains further sections:  
* "Kursbuchtabellensuche". This button gives options to search by:
* Regionaltabellen (In spite of its name, a complete table list)  
** Bahnhof/Halt (Station/Halt)
* Bustabellen (Bus services)  
** Liniennummer (Line Number. Note this is '''not''' the table number, but the ''S-Bahn'' or ''RB/RE'' line number. These are duplicated across Germany, so a search for (e.g.) ''S2'' or ''RB40'' will produce results from many different areas, from which one can pick the desired route)
* Schifffahrtstabellen (Shipping services)  
** Kursbuchstreckennummer (Table number)
* Bergbahnen (Mountain railways)  
** Zugnummer (Train number e.g. ''IC1234'')
* Museums- und Nostalgiebahnen (Preserved railways)
 
from which one can select the desired table number.
* "Interaktive Streckenkarte". This button produces a passenger network map. Scroll to the desired area, click on the table number next to a line and that line's timetable will be displayed.
 
* "Tabellenübersichten". This button produces further options, including:  
** Regionaltabellen (In spite of its name, an almost-complete table list - but see note on omitted tables below)  
** Museums- und Nostalgiebahnen (Preserved railways - only a very few shown)  
 
The Schifffahrtstabellen (shipping services) and Bergbahnen (mountain railways) buttons do not link to any tables.
 
Unfortunately, quite a few timetables no longer appear in the electronic ''Kursbuch''. These are listed in the 'Lines with Obscure or Sparse Passenger Services' section under [https://egtre.info/wiki/Germany_-_Lines_with_Obscure_or_Sparse_passenger_services#Regular_services_not_in_the_Kursbuch 'Regular Services Not in the ''Kursbuch'' '].
 
While ''IC/EC'' and ''ICE'' services appear in many tables alongside regional services, there are many routes where long-distance services operate but only regional services are shown in the tables. For full timetables of long-distance services, the [https://www.europeanrailtimetable.eu/ European Rail Timetable] is recommended.
 
The [https://www.bahnhof.de/ bahnhof.de] site shows pdf copies of the printed station departure sheets for almost all stations in Germany, both for the regular timetable and for any alterations. Exceptions are stations on a few branch lines where the infrastructure is not owned or managed by DB InfraGO. Note that if the initial search returns an error message, selecting "Bahnhof wählen" and then searching often works.


===Printed Timetable===
===Printed Timetable===
DB no longer provides a hard-copy national timetable. The 2007-8 Kursbuch was the last one available for general sale. Some Länder have continued to sponsor the production of printed timetable books in Kursbuch format, but only for those tables traversing the relevant Land: Baden-Württemberg, Thüringen, NRW and Bayern (only via mail order) have been observed.
DB has not provided a hard-copy national timetable since 2007-08. A local book for the 2025 timetable in Nordrhein-Westfalen is available to order from the [https://www.vrs.de/fahren/liniennetz-und-fahrplaene/infomedien-bestellen/produktauswahl VRS website]. Baden-Württemberg and Schleswig-Holstein also still publish timetable books for services in their areas.


===Engineering Information===
===Engineering Information===
[http://bauarbeiten.bahn.de bauarbeiten.bahn.de] in German only.
[https://www.bahn.de/service/fahrplaene/bauarbeiten Engineering work information] in German only.


The DB Bahn website now offers an [http://www.bahn.de/i/view/GBR/en/services/overview/echtzeitinformation.shtml Alternative train connections] service: "Detour recommended: Now you know which connection will get you to your destination in the event of delays or disruptions".
A DB engineering works app (''DB Bauarbeiten'') is available in both Android and iPhone versions but only in German.
 
A new app [https://inside.bahn.de/db-bauarbeiten-app/?dbkanal_006=L01_S01_D088_KTL0005_INSIDE-BAHN-2016_TWITTER-DB-BAUARBEITEN-_LZ01 DB Bauarbeiten] is available in both Android and iPhone versions but may not be available outside Germany.


The APKPure [https://m.apkpure.com/db-bauarbeiten/de.bauarbeiten.bahn DB Bauarbeiten] app gives a number of options.
The APKPure [https://m.apkpure.com/db-bauarbeiten/de.bauarbeiten.bahn DB Bauarbeiten] app gives a number of options.
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The [[#Journey Planner|Journey Planner]] (above) selects bus services if they provide the best journey.
The [[#Journey Planner|Journey Planner]] (above) selects bus services if they provide the best journey.


[http://www.bahn.com/i/view/USA/en/prices/europe/ic-bus.shtml DB IC Bus] provides some useful routes such as Hahn Airport - Trier.
==Maps==


==Maps==
===Printed Maps===
===Printed Maps===
*''Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland'' (ISBN 978-3-89494-136-9), published by Verlag Schweers + Wall GmbH ([http://www.schweers-wall.de website] in German, English and Italian) shows railways at 1:300.000 scale, with enlargements for the Ruhr and principal cities. Single and double-track lines, electrified and freight-only railways are distinguished. Private lines are identified and named, DB lines used by other passenger train operators are marked and the gauge of narrow-gauge lines is stated. Lines out of use and those entirely closed are also shown. Details can be confused in congested areas, particularly because parallel lines are used to show railways with more than two tracks. Rivers, canals and forests are marked.
*[[Printed Maps#SW-DE | Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland]] by Schweers + Wall.
*DB's ''Offizielle Streckenkarte der Deutschen Bahnen'', which is widely available, shows all German railways on a sheet map at a scale of 1:750.000, with a 1:375.000 enlargement of the Ruhr area. This distinguishes single and double track lines, narrow gauge and electrified railways. Depiction of complex areas can be confusing, particularly because four-track railways are marked as two adjacent double track lines. Colouring indicates lines used by express trains and the frequency of service. Rivers, canals and autobahnen are marked, with shading to indicate hills and mountains.
*[[Printed Maps#ERA-E | European Railway Atlas (All-Europe Edition)]] by M.G. Ball.
*''Fahrplankarte für Bus und Bahn Deutschland'' published by ''Verkehrsclub Deutschland'' is a geographically-representative network diagram at a scale of 1:750.000, with enlargements for various city areas. Colour is used to indicate the nature of a service along a railway, and the thickness of the line indicates service frequency. Railways used by several different services are depicted by a parallel line for each. Use of pale green to indicate S-Bahn services means that these are hardly visible. Non-passenger lines are not marked, but inter-urban bus routes are. Rivers, canals and relief are shown.
*[[Printed Maps#ERA-R-2 | European Railway Atlas (Regional Series - Book 2: Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Italy)]] M.G. Ball.
*European Railway Atlas: Denmark, Germany, Austria, Switzerland by M.G. Ball (1993) (ISBN 0-7110-2116-3)
* The DB ''Karte für den Personenverkehr Deutschland'', which showed all German railways on a sheet map at a scale of 1:1,200,000, has now been withdrawn.
*[http://www.europeanrailwayatlas.com European Railway Atlas] by M.G. Ball (2008 onwards)
*RV Verlag road maps and atlases at 1:200.000 scale show railways generally comprehensively and accurately. Closed railways may remain marked for some time after track has been lifted. RV Verlag publications are widely available in Germany, including at station bookshops.


===Web-based Maps===
===Web-based Maps===
*[http://www.sporenplan.nl/ Sporenplan] has a series of on-line maps and schematic track diagrams. Click on "Sporenplannen" on the left hand side for a map showing the countries covered.
*[https://www.sporenplan.nl/ Sporenplan] has a series of on-line maps and schematic track diagrams. Click on "Sporenplannen" on the left-hand side, then on Germany on the map, then "Actuele tekeningen - simpel" for a map showing coverage of the current network. This is limited to most of the former West Germany with no coverage in the eastern ''Länder''.
*Thorsten Büker's [http://www.bueker.net/trainspotting/maps_germany.php Map of Germany], with enlargements of [http://www.bueker.net/trainspotting/maps_hamburg-area.php Hamburg], [http://www.bueker.net/trainspotting/maps_berlin-area.php Berlin], [http://www.bueker.net/trainspotting/maps_rhein-ruhr-area.php the Rhein-Ruhr area] and [http://www.bueker.net/trainspotting/maps_main-neckar-area.php the Main-Neckar area].
*[https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/germany.html Map of Germany] dated December 2022 - on the [https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/ Railroad Maps site]. Also enlargements for [https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/berlin.html Berlin], [https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/hamburg.html Hamburg], [https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/dortmund_essen_duisburg_dusseldorf_cologne.html Dortmund / Essen / Duisburg / Düsseldorf / Köln], [https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/aachen_maastricht_liege.html Aachen] and [https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/frankfurt_mannheim_karlsruhe_stuttgart.html Frankfurt / Mannheim / Karlsruhe / Stuttgart].
*[[Maps and Plans#Germany|Maps and Plans - Germany]]
*[[Maps and Plans#Germany|Maps and Plans - Germany]].
* [http://www.bahn.de/p/view/buchung/karten/streckennetz.shtml DB Network diagrams] show lines with regular ''local'' passenger service in each federal state. The graphical style and level of detail varies slightly from state to state; S-Bahn services and local services by other train operators are often shown with less detail. Lines used only by long-distance trains are usually omitted.
*The DB InfraGO Infrastructure Register has an [https://www.dbinfrago.com/web/schienennetz/netzzugang-und-regulierung/infrastrukturregister/interaktive_karte-11089022# interactive map] available.
* The DB Netz [http://www.db-netz.de/fahrweg-en/start/network_access/infrastructure_register/ Infrastructure Register]. It is based around an [http://stredax.dbnetze.com/ISRViewer/public_html_en/svg/index.html interactive map] which, although a good source for junction names and line numbers, can be misleading at small scales due to extreme stylization. Each named ''Bahnhof'' is shown as a point even though it may be geographically extensive relative to nearby lines, so if for example two corners of a triangular junction are signaled as part of the same ''Bahnhof'' the interactive map will show it as two parallel lines with no indication that they connect to the Bahnhof in different directions. The interactive map does lead to more accurate track diagrams for most larger stations, though. Double-clicking on one of the small circles with the "Selektion" tool opens a list of further links, in which the "Serviceeinrichtungen" link, if present, leads to a PDF containing a track diagram on one of the last pages. The "Detailplan" link will show an SVG diagram which is often garbled and of little use. The Infrastukturregister contains a third set of track diagrams under the [http://www.db-netz.de/fahrweg-de/start/nutzungsbedingungen/infrastrukturregister/TEN_Spurplaene/ TEN Spurpläne] heading. These are also in SVG format, but less likely to be garbled than the ones accessible from the interactive map. On the other hand, many larger stations are split into multiple named parts each with a separate diagram, and it can be difficult to figure out how they fit together without crossreferencing with the ''Serviceeinrichtungen'' diagram for the entire station. As such they are most useful for figuring out where in the station a particular named part is.
*DB Netze had a catalogue of railway maps available to order. It is not clear if this still exists on the new [https://www.dbinfrago.com/web-en DB InfraGO website].
*The [https://www.bahn.de/service/fahrplaene/streckennetz DB website] has downloadable schematic maps of local services for all ''Länder''. It also has very general maps showing the ''ICE'' and ''IC/EC'' networks.


==Ticketing==
==Ticketing==
DB offers its own network tickets, which give much better value than the standard One Country passes.


Among the most useful tickets is the ''Schönes-Wochenende Ticket'', which gives unlimited travel for up to five people travelling together on all local trains (''S-Bahn'', ''RB'', ''RE'' and ''IRE'') on a Saturday or Sunday. This includes almost all private operators (except most tourist and preserved railways). A few lines that cross into neighbouring countries are included. The ticket is also valid on many tram, U-Bahn and bus services, but not all. One notable exception is the RMV area (Frankfurt-am-Main and Wiesbaden). The ticket is valid from midnight at the start of one day until 03.00 on the following day. The number of people travelling must now be specified when booking - there is a base fare for one passenger with each additional passenger (up to five in total) being charged a small extra amount. Tickets are best purchased online or from a ticket vending machine as there is a EUR 2 surcharge when they are bought at a ticket office.
===''Deutschland-Ticket''===
 
This ticket (''D-Ticket'' for short) is a season ticket for almost all urban, local and regional transport across Germany, priced at only €58 per calendar month. It is sold on a subscription basis and in digital format only. The price is due to increase to €63 per month in January 2026.
 
Tickets are not valid as a rule on long-distance services (''IC/EC'' or ''ICE''), but there are certain exceptions as shown in the validity conditions, for example west of Bremen inclusive. Note however that the long-standing acceptance of local tickets (including the ''D-Ticket'') on ''IC'' services in the Berlin/Brandenburg area will cease in December 2025. ''D-Tickets'' are valid on most of the narrow-gauge steam railways in eastern Germany that operate regular scheduled services, usually on payment of a supplement.
 
A summary of the validity conditions is on the DB site in English [https://int.bahn.de/en/offers/regional/deutschland-ticket here]. Full validity details are on a pdf which is linked to from the DB German-language site [https://www.bahn.de/angebot/regio/deutschland-ticket here] under ''In welchen Zügen gilt das Deutschland-Ticket?'' then under ''Geltungsbereich Deutschland-Ticket''.
 
Normally a German or Eurozone-based bank account is required to set up a direct debit for the subscription; however a few possibilities for international purchasers are known, such as the Hamburg transport authority's "HVV Switch" app where UK customers can use PayPal, or "MoPla Solutions" which allows payment by UK credit card.
 
For occasional visits to Germany, the following offers may be more suitable.
 
===Rover tickets===
 
There are two main versions, the '''Quer-durchs-Land Ticket''' which covers the whole of Germany, and '''Länder-Tickets''' which cover each individual region (''Land'') of the country.
 
All these tickets are valid from 09:00 on Mondays to Fridays, and from midnight at weekends and on public holidays, until 03:00 on the morning following the day of validity and are only valid on local train services (''RE'', ''RB'' and ''S-Bahn'') whether operated by DB or any of the many non-DB operators. Tickets are not generally valid on ''IC/EC'' or ''ICE'' services, but there are a few exceptions, notably west of Bremen. Note however that acceptance of local tickets on ''IC'' services in the Berlin/Brandenburg area will end in December 2025. Museum-type lines are generally excluded apart from the few that accept local public transport tickets.
 
The main difference between the two types of ticket, apart from the areas of validity, is that the ''Quer-durchs-Land Ticket'' is not valid on local urban transport (buses, trams and ''U-Bahn'' services) whereas ''Länder-Tickets'' almost always are (the exception being the ''Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Ticket'' which is not valid on urban transport except in Hamburg).
 
The ''Quer-durchs-Land Ticket'' and most ''Länder-Tickets'' are valid for between one and five people, with a base fare being charged for the first person and a small additional amount added for each additional traveller. The number of passengers must be specified at the time of purchase and all their names written on the ticket. Exceptions are the ''Hessen-Ticket'' which has a flat fare for up to five people, and the ''Schöner-Tag-Ticket NRW'' which only comes in versions for single or between two and five travellers.
 
Some ''Länder-Tickets'' are valid in more than one ''Land''; in particular Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt and Thüringen count as the one area, and a ticket for any one of these ''Länder'' is valid in all three. Rheinland-Pfalz and Saarland also count as the one area, and the ''Schleswig-Holstein-Ticket'' is valid in Hamburg and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, although the cheaper ''Mecklenburg-Vorpommern-Ticket'' is valid in Hamburg but not in Schleswig-Holstein. Often tickets are valid a short distance into other ''Länder'' or even other countries.


The weekday equivalent of the ''Schönes-Wochenende Ticket'' is the ''Quer-durchs-Land Ticket''.  It is valid on all local trains after 09.00 on a weekday until 03.00 the following day. It is however not valid on local city transport (trams, buses and U-Bahn services). It costs slightly more, both for the base fare and for each additional passenger, than the ''Schönes-Wochenende Ticket''.  It costs EUR 2 extra to buy this ticket at a ticket office.
There are numerous options only available in certain ''Länder'' including all-day, evening-only, youth and First Class versions.


[http://www.bahn.de/i/view/GBR/en/prices/germany/laender-ticket.shtml ''Länder'' Tickets] give unlimited travel for up to five people for one day throughout the ''Land'' (and in some cases a neighbouring ''Land'' as well) concerned on local trains. Most ''Länder'' also offer a cheaper ticket for one person. Most urban areas have their own ''Tarifverbund'' or ''Verkehrsverbund'' in which local fares apply. Nearly all of these offer day tickets or other concessions.
Extensions to ''Länder-Tickets'' to other countries are available such as the ''Niedersachsen-Ticket'' to Groningen (NL), the ''Saarland-Ticket'' to Lorraine (FR) and Luxembourg (the ''Saar-Lor-Lux Ticket'') and the ''Sachsen-'' or ''Bayern-'' Tickets to Bohemia (''Böhmen'') (CZ). Note that when these add-ons are purchased, the validity in Germany is only within the ''Land'' stated (e.g. Sachsen).


''Länder'' Tickets are occasionally valid on some express services. Official validity information is best obtained from the [http://www.diebefoerderer.de/Tarife.122.0.html TBFE website], the website of the German train operating companies.
Validity details for each of these tickets can be checked on the DB website's [https://www.bahn.de/angebot/regio regional offers page] (in German - the English-language pages no longer give this information).


Bargain tickets include ''Sparpreise'' which are the equivalent of British 'Advance' tickets, and are subject to similar restrictions. They are only available on journeys that involve at least one leg on an ''IC/EC'' or ''ICE'' service, and on those services the specified train must be used. Local connecting services (as part of the through journey) are not time-restricted; although a suggested service may be shown, this is not binding.
Tariff association (''Verkehrsverbund'') tickets are also available in most regions of Germany. These can cover just the area round a town, or an entire region such as Berlin and Brandenburg. They normally offer day tickets for various zonal combinations which may be better value than a ''Länder-Ticket'', or have no weekday start time restriction. Zones can be simple London-style concentric rings, as in München, or a complicated system of adjacent hexagons, as in the Frankfurt am Main area. Careful study of the various tariff options is recommended.
 
Special fares are payable on ''ICE'' services; if purchasing a ticket for a route on which ''ICE'' trains operate it is important to specify which type of train it is intended to use.
===Point-to-point tickets===
 
DB tickets were valid on HKX long distance services but this ceased from 31 Aug 2016. Negotiations are still ongoing regarding Interrail and Eurail tickets. See [http://www.hkx.de/index.php/ticketinfo/db-ticket-im-hkx DB-Ticket im HKX].
As with most European railways, dearer flexible and cheaper train-specific tickets are available.
 
'''Flexible tickets''' are known as ''Flexpreis'' on long-distance (''ICE'' or ''IC/EC'') trains and as ''Normalpreis'' on local trains when priced by DB. They can be used on any train of the specified type on any permitted route between origin and destination. Break of journey is allowed. Tickets for ''ICE'' trains are dearer than those for ''IC/EC'' or purely local services. A ''Flexpreis'' ticket for a dearer train type can be used on cheaper train types if desired.
 
''Notes'':
 
1. ''Flexpreis'' tickets are no longer available from on-board staff. If you board an ''ICE'' or ''IC/EC'' train without a ticket, you must buy a ticket on the DB website or app within 10 minutes of departing from your boarding station or be liable for a considerable surcharge. <br>
2. ''Normalpreis'' tickets cannot be upgraded to be used on long-distance services except where there is disruption, when they may exceptionally be allowed to be used without extra payment.
 
Local tickets entirely within city or ''Land'' tariff areas have different pricing structures and conditions. Often these tickets are zonal and time-limited, and valid on other local transport, but they may well be non-refundable and have no break of journey facility.  
 
'''Advance tickets''', known as ''Sparpreis'' and ''Super Sparpreis'', are available on any journey with at least one leg on a long-distance service. They are only valid on the booked long-distance train. Cheaper tickets are available to under-27s and over-65s.
 
Full details of all DB tickets are on the DB website [https://www.bahn.de/angebot/spar-flexpreis ticketing page].
 
===''BahnCards''===
 
''BahnCards'' are annual discount railcards, sold on a subscription basis, which give either a 25% or 50% discount and in either First or Second Class versions. Cheaper Youth and Senior Cards are available, as are trial and occasional promotional versions. There is also a ''BahnCard100'' which gives one year's unlimited travel on almost all public transport throughout Germany.
 
Full details are available on the [https://int.bahn.de/en/offers/bahncard DB website].
 
===Flixtrain tickets===
 
Flixtrain tickets must be booked from the [https://www.flixbus.de/ Flixbus website] or a Flixbus office, which can be found at major bus stations. DB tickets and Interrail/Eurail passes are not valid on Flixtrain services.


==Infrastructure==
==Infrastructure==
===Infrastructure Authority===
===Infrastructure Authority===
[http://fahrweg.dbnetze.com/fahrweg-en/start/ DB Netz AG], a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn AG, is responsible for track and infrastructure.
[https://www.dbinfrago.com/web-en DB InfraGO AG], a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn AG, is responsible for track and infrastructure. It replaced DB Netz AG on 27 December 2023, when it was created by a merger of the DB Netz AG and DB Station&Service organisations.


The [http://www.eisenbahnbundesamt.de Eisenbahn-Bundesamt (EBA)] is a government agency tasked with regulatory oversight of safety and some other matters, independent of DB.
The [https://www.eba.bund.de/DE/home_node.html Eisenbahn-Bundesamt (EBA)] is a government agency tasked with regulatory oversight of safety and some other matters, independent of DB.


===Network Statement===
===Network Statement===
[http://fahrweg.dbnetze.com/fahrweg-en/start/ DB Netz AG] ''> Network Statement 2014''
[https://www.dbinfrago.com/web-en/rail-network/network_statement/Network-Statement-2025-12612778 DB InfraGO AG] ''> Network Statement 2025''


===Gauge===
===Gauge===
Standard. There are various narrow-gauge private lines. DB operates a metre-gauge line on the island of Wangerooge. The train ferry terminal at Sassnitz Fährhafen (Mukran) has 1524 mm gauge tracks to receive and despatch wagons from and to Klaipeda, in addition to the standard gauge tracks. The funicular section Obstfelderschmiede - Lichtenhain is 1800 mm gauge.
Standard.  
 
There are various narrow-gauge non-DB lines, including former DB/DR operated ones in the Harz (1000 mm gauge) and at Bad Doberan (''"Molli"'') (900 mm) and, all 750 mm, on the island of Rügen (''"Rasender Roland"''), at Oschatz (''Döllnitzbahn/"Wilder Robert"''), Radebeul (''Lößnitzgrundbahn''), Freital (''Weißeritztalbahn''), Cranzahl (''Fichtelbergbahn''), and Zittau (''Zittauer Schmalspurbahn'').  
 
DB operates a metre gauge line on the island of Wangerooge. A number of tramway systems are metre gauge.
 
The train ferry terminal at Sassnitz Fährhafen (Mukran) has 1524 mm gauge tracks to receive and despatch wagons from and to Klaipeda, in addition to the standard gauge tracks.  
 
The funicular section Obstfelderschmiede - Lichtenhain is 1800 mm gauge.


===Electrification===
===Electrification===
15 kV 16.7 Hz. The line between Emmerich and the Netherlands border is 1500 V dc but work has started on converting it to 25 kV ac for easier operation of Betuwelijn freight traffic.
15 kV 16.7 Hz ac.
 
The Berlin ''S-Bahn'' is 800V dc third rail, and the Hamburg ''S-Bahn'' is 1200V dc third rail. Obstfelderschmiede to Cursdorf is 500V dc overhead and Blankenburg (Harz) to Elbingerode and Kalkwerk Homberg, which has been freight-only since 2005, is 25kV 50Hz ac. (The line between Kalkwerk Homberg and Königshütte closed to all traffic in 2000 and is now lifted).
 
The following cross-border lines have sections within Germany that use the other country's electrification system. Distances shown are the sections within Germany between the frontier and the electrification changeover point:
 
Hengelo (NL) - Bad Bentheim: 8.1 km at 1500 V dc<br>
Arnhem/''Betuweroute'' (NL) - Emmerich: 5.6 km at 25 kV ac (see ''Note'' below)<br>
Welkenraedt/''LGV'' (BE) - Aachen Hbf: 7.4 km at 3 kV dc<br>
Węgliniec (PL) - Horka: 1.5 km at 3 kV dc<br>
Rzepin (PL) - Frankfurt (Oder): 1.7 km at 3 kV dc.<br>
It is planned to electrify the few hundred metres from the Polish border viaduct at Zgorzelec into Görlitz Hbf at 3 kV dc.


The Berlin S-Bahn is 800V dc third rail, and the Hamburg S-Bahn is 1200V dc third rail. Obstfelderschmiede to Cursdorf is 500V dc overhead and Blankenburg (Harz) to Königshütte is 25kV 50Hz  (This line is out of use between Königshütte and Elbingerode).
''Note'': The line between Emmerich and the Netherlands border was 1500 V dc but has been converted to 25 kV ac for easier operation of ''Betuweroute'' freight traffic. This means that trains between Emmerich and Arnhem must be able to operate under three different electrification systems.


===Rule of the road===
===Rule of the road===
Right. A short piece of the Aachen - Liège main line has left-hand running between the west end of the Busch Tunnel and the Belgian border.  There is also left-hand running between a flyover at Nürnberg-Reichelsdorf and Nürnberg Hbf, in order to facilitate reversal at the latter by trains between the Treuchtlingen and Würzburg lines.
Right.  
 
A few sections of line have left-hand running, as follows:
 
* a short piece of the Aachen Liège main line between the east end of the Busch Tunnel (Üst Aachen Süd) and the Belgian border;
* between Nürnberg-Reichelsdorf and Nürnberg Hbf, on the non-''S-Bahn'' lines only, to facilitate reversal by trains running between the Treuchtlingen and Würzburg lines;
* on the Hamburg ''S-Bahn'' between Altona and Holstenstraße, to assist reversal.


===Distances===
===Distances===
The Schweers + Wall ''Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland'' (ISBN 978-3-89494-136-9) is the best source of distance information.
The Schweers + Wall ''Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland'' (11th Edn. ISBN 978-3-89494-149-9) is the best source of distance information.


==Other Railways==
==Other Railways==
Line 135: Line 240:


==Tourist lines==
==Tourist lines==
Very few tourist lines run frequently - fortnightly during the summer is quite common, although some operate only two or three times a year. In many cases these are weekend operations over private freight lines. Whilst many tourist trains are steam-worked, numerous preserved railbuses and diesel locomotives are also used.
Very few tourist lines run frequently - once or twice a month during the summer is quite common, although some operate only two or three times a year. In many cases these are weekend operations over private freight lines. Whilst many tourist trains are steam-worked, numerous preserved railbuses and diesel locomotives are also used.
A German language site [http://www.eisenbahnwelt.com/deutschlandkarte.html Eisenbahn Vereinskarte Deutschland] comprises an interactive map of Germany showing most preserved railways.
A German language site [http://www.eisenbahnwelt.com/deutschlandkarte.html Eisenbahn Vereinskarte Deutschland] comprises an interactive map of Germany showing most preserved railways.
An [http://sinfin.net/railways/world/germany/touristde/index.html English language site] gives an overview map split by Lander, with a list of many lines in alphabetical order in each Lander section. Both give direct links to the various railways' homepages/timetables.
An [https://sinfin.net/railways/world/germany/touristde/index.html English language site] gives an overview map split by ''Länder'', with a list of many lines in alphabetical order in each ''Land'' section. Both give direct links to the various railways' homepages/timetables.
The DB website gives timetables for a number of preserved lines in its [http://kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe/d.?rt=1&dosearch=1&searchmode=tableplus&controlpattern=P.12ddd&table_nr=12&mainframe=utable&tocinfo=mus_tab Museums- und Nostalgiebahnen section], sometimes in a more easily intelligible form than the railways’ own websites.
The DB ''Kursbuch'' site gives timetables for a very small number of preserved lines in its [http://kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe/d.?rt=1&dosearch=1&searchmode=tableplus&controlpattern=P.12ddd&table_nr=12&mainframe=utable&tocinfo=mus_tab Museums- und Nostalgiebahnen section].
Timetables and other information about tourist lines are published annually in ''Kursbuch der deutschen Museums-Eisenbahnen'' (now published by [http://www.eisenbahn-kurier.de Eisenbahn Kurier], EK-Verlag GmbH, Lörracher Str. 16, 79115 Freiburg, tel +49 761 703100).
 
Timetables and other information about tourist lines are published annually in ''Kursbuch der deutschen Museums-Eisenbahnen'' (published by [https://www.eisenbahn-kurier.de/ Eisenbahn Kurier], EK-Verlag GmbH, Lörracher Str. 16, 79115 Freiburg, tel +49 761 703100).  
Owing to the very large number of tourist lines in Germany, no one source appears to give a comprehensive list of every operation, so it is suggested that each of the above sources is consulted.
Owing to the very large number of tourist lines in Germany, no one source appears to give a comprehensive list of every operation, so it is suggested that each of the above sources is consulted.


A special category are Parkeisenbahnen, which are complex miniature railways where operations closely follow the prototype. A comprehensive list of these is given in [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parkeisenbahn Wikipedia].
A special category are ''Parkeisenbahnen'', which are complex miniature railways where operations closely follow the prototype. A comprehensive list of these is given in [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parkeisenbahn Wikipedia].


Rail cycling ('Draisinenfahrten') is possible on a number of lines; see the [http://www.draisinenfahrten.de/index.html IG Draisinenfahrten website]. Click on 'Deutschland' to obtain a list of operations in geographical order with some useful information. Click on 'International', followed by 'Draisinenlinks' to obtain website details.
Rail cycling (''Draisinenfahrten'') is possible on a number of lines; see the [https://www.draisinenfahrten.de/ IG Draisinenfahrten website] for details of a few of them.


==Metro==
==Metro==
Berlin, Hamburg, München, Nürnberg. A number of other cities have underground tram routes, known as U-Bahn or Stadtbahn, including Bielefeld, Bochum, Bonn, Dortmund, Düsseldorf, Duisburg, Essen, Frankfurt am Main, Gelsenkirchen, Hannover, Kassel, Köln, Ludwigshafen, Mannheim, Mühlheim (Ruhr) and Stuttgart.
Berlin, Hamburg, München, Nürnberg. A number of other cities have partially underground or interurban tram networks, known as ''U-Bahn'' or ''Stadtbahn'', including Bielefeld, Bochum, Bonn, Dortmund, Düsseldorf, Duisburg, Essen, Frankfurt am Main, Gelsenkirchen, Hannover, Köln, Ludwigshafen, Mannheim, Mülheim (Ruhr) and Stuttgart.
 
Track plans for all metro and tram systems in Germany are available on the [https://www.gleisplanweb.eu/ Gleisplanweb site].


Track plans for most or all metro and tram systems in Germany are available on the [http://www.gleisplanweb.eu/ Gleisplanweb site] or [http://www.doprava.unas.cz/schemata/kolejova/zahranici.html. Doprava]
== Trams/LRT-Systems ==
Augsburg, Bad Schandau, Berlin, Bielefeld, Bochum, Bonn, Brandenburg, Braunschweig, Bremen, Chemnitz, Cottbus, Darmstadt, Dessau, Dortmund, Dresden, Düsseldorf, Duisburg, Erfurt, Essen, Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt an der Oder, Freiburg (Breisgau), Gelsenkirchen, Gera, Görlitz, Gotha, Halberstadt, Halle (Saale), Hannover, Heidelberg, Heilbronn, Jena, Karlsruhe, Kassel, Köln, Krefeld, Leipzig, Ludwigshafen, Magdeburg, Mainz, Mannheim, Mülheim (Ruhr), München, Naumburg (Saale), Nordhausen, Nürnberg, Oberhausen, Plauen, Potsdam, Rostock, Rüdersdorf, Saarbrücken, Schwerin, Strausberg, Stuttgart, Ulm, Woltersdorf, Würzburg, Zwickau. Many neighbouring systems are interlinked. It is possible to travel entirely by tram, changing cars and gauge several times, all the way from Benrath (south of Düsseldorf) to Witten (east of Bochum). This is reputed to be the longest possible journey by tram anywhere in the world.


==Trams==
Some of the above networks are "Tram-Train" systems with certain vehicles that can run on both the urban tram network and the suburban rail network, including Chemnitz, Karlsruhe/Heilbronn, Kassel and Saarbrücken. In Zwickau, heavy-rail diesel railcars share a short section of mixed-gauge (1435/1000 mm) track with the city tramway system and run under tramway regulations, but there is no further connection with the tram network because of the different gauges
Augsburg, Bad Schandau, Berlin, Bielefeld, Bochum, Bonn, Brandenburg, Braunschweig, Bremen, Chemnitz, Cottbus, Darmstadt, Dessau, Dortmund, Dresden, Düsseldorf, Duisburg, Erfurt, Essen, Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt am Oder, Freiburg (Breisgau), Gelsenkirchen, Gera, Görlitz, Gotha, Halberstadt, Halle (Saale), Hannover, Heidelberg, Jena, Karlsruhe, Kassel, Köln, Krefeld, Leipzig, Ludwigshafen, Magdeburg, Mainz, Mannheim, Mülheim (Ruhr), München, Nordhausen, Nürnberg, Plauen, Potsdam, Rostock, Rüdersdorf, Schwerin, Strausberg, Stuttgart, Ulm, Woltersdorf, Würzburg, Zwickau. Many neighbouring systems are interlinked. It is possible to travel entirely by tram, changing cars and gauge several times, all the way from Benrath (south of Düsseldorf) to Witten (east of Bochum). This is reputed to be the longest possible journey by tram anywhere in the world.


Track plans for most or all tram systems in Germany are available on the [http://www.gleisplanweb.eu/ Gleisplanweb site] or on the [http://www.doprava.unas.cz/schemata/kolejova/zahranici.html Doprava] website.  
Track plans for all tram systems in Germany are available on the [https://www.gleisplanweb.eu/ Gleisplanweb site] or on the [https://www.urbanrail.net/eu/de/germany.htm UrbanRail] site.  


See also [[Germany_-_Tram_services_over_obscure_routes|Germany - Tram services over obscure routes]]
See also [[Germany_-_Tram_services_over_obscure_routes|Germany - Tram services over obscure routes]]
Line 160: Line 268:
==Recent and Future Changes==
==Recent and Future Changes==
===General===
===General===
In recent years DB has been re-organised on a divisional basis, as a prelude to privatisation, but with strong central control. Plans to float parts of DB, particularly the long-distance business, have been disrupted because forecast profits have not been made.  DB as a whole is suffering unexpectedly high losses, principally due to overspending on major infrastructure projects.  Notwithstanding this, DB is acquiring interests abroad (for example, in UK alone: DB Cargo, Chiltern Railways and Arriva).


The funding of local transport, including railways, now rests with the Länder (Provinces) and in some areas responsibility has been devolved to the Kreis (Districts). Western Länder are generally supportive of rail. Baden-Württemberg and Rheinland-Pfalz, in particular, have been active in promoting rail re-openings.
The funding of local public transport, including railways, is controlled by the ''Länder'' (regions) and in some areas responsibility has been devolved to the ''Kreise'' (districts). Western ''Länder'' are generally supportive of rail and many lines have been re-opened in the last couple of decades. However in the eastern ''Länder'' many lines have been closed as a result of depopulation and increasing car ownership since reunification, and lack of funds to support such a dense network of local services.
The German railways were never entirely nationalised, with various independent lines surviving, particularly in Baden-Württemberg. Now Länder are tendering the operation of local passenger services, and many independent operators have won tenders in competition with DB. In some cases these are long-established, local railway companies, expanding out of their own network.  Some operators are entirely new and foreign companies have taken responsibility for some services.
 
The rate of closures has slowed considerably in recent years, and the federal government is making funds available to the ''Länder'' for re-opening schemes. While there have been numerous lengthy lists published of closed lines which are possible candidates for re-opening, only those proposals which are likely to be progressed with are mentioned below.
 
===Recent Changes===
====Openings====
 
=====2025=====
 
The following line opened on 22 September 2025
 
{| class="osstable3"
| 200.2
| Blankenfelde (Kr Teltow-Fläming) former ''S-Bahn'' platform – main station
| Extension of ''S2'' to terminate in the main station
|}
 
The following lines opened on 1/2 August 2025
 
{| class="osstable3"
| 206
| Neuruppin Rheinsberger Tor – Herzberg (Mark)
| Reopened temporarily until 30 April 2026 for diverted ''RE6'' services because of engineering work between Neuruppin and Kremmen
|-
| 202
| Dallgow-Döberitz – Wustermark Awf [– Hennigsdorf]
| Reopened temporarily until 30 April 2026 for diverted ''RE2'' services because of engineering work between Berlin-Spandau and Brieselang
|}
 
The following line opened on 1 July 2025
 
{| class="osstable3"
| 459
| Marienheide – Lüdenscheid-Brügge
| Reopened after the severe floods of 14 July 2021
|}
 
The following line opened on 16 June 2025


Open access long-distance passenger and freight operation is possible in Germany.  Increasing numbers of open access freight operations are starting, but there has been limited success with passenger services, despite DB Netz having been ordered to charge independent operators the same prices for track access as the train-operating divisions of DB, which had received substantial discounts. Georg Verkehrs (of Germany) and [http://www.snalltaget.se/en Snälltåget] (of Sweden - a subsidiary of Transdev, formerly Veolia Transport) have operated overnight trains between Berlin and Malmö for a limited summer season since 2013, replacing the previous Georg Verkehrs/SJ operation. Transdev also operate the [https://www.hex-online.de/ Harz-Berlin Express] between Goslar/Thale and Berlin.  
{| class="osstable3"
| 474
| Gerolstein – Kall
| Reopened after the severe floods of 14 July 2021. However no through Köln – Trier services until at least October 2025 because of electrification and resignalling work with replacement buses operating between Gerolstein and Bitburg-Erdorf or Trier Hbf until then.
|}


Other private long-distance services include [https://www.hkx.de/en/ Hamburg-Köln-Express (HKX)], which started a Hamburg to Köln service on 23 July 2012 and [https://locomore.com Locomore], which commenced operations between Stuttgart and Berlin on 14 December 2016. These ventures have not been particularly successful; the original three daily HKX train pairs have been gradually reduced to one train each way on Fridays to Sundays only, and Locomore services were suspended after 12th May 2017. Former long-distance operators include Eurobahn, Vogtlandbahn and InterConnex (another Veolia/Transdev brand).
The following line opened on 14 April 2025


===Openings===
{| class="osstable3"
====Forthcoming Openings====
| 790.21
The ''Weißeritztalbahn'' narrow-gauge line from Freital-Hainsberg regains its service between Dippoldiswalde and Kurort Kipsdorf from 19th June 2017, some 15 years after the line was destroyed by flooding. The current six train pairs between Freital and Dippoldiswalde are replaced by two through to Kipsdorf and one to Dippoldiswalde.
| Schorndorf – Rudersberg
| Reopened after severe flood damage closed the line on 3 June 2024. A further 0.8 km section to Rudersberg Nord was reopened by the end of May 2025. The final 0.8 km section of regular passenger line to Rudersberg-Oberndorf remains closed until further notice.
|}
 
The following lines opened on 3 March 2025
 
{| class="osstable3"
| 693.1
| Trier Hafenstraße – Trier West – Abzw Karthaus Nordwest [– Igel]
| New Wittlich – Luxembourg service (SuX) over the reopened ''Trierer Weststrecke''. Trier Hafenstraße is a new station around 1 km south of Ehrang station, which has closed to passengers.
|-
| 693.2
| [Trier-Zewen –] Abzw Karthaus Nordwest – Karthaus Moselbrücke – Konz
| New Trier Hafenstraße – Saarburg service over the ''Trierer Weststrecke'' and these two curves
|}
 
The following line opened on 10 February 2025
 
{| class="osstable3"
| 703
| (Mulhouse Ville (France)) – Neuenburg (Baden) Grenze – Müllheim in Markgräflerland
| Reopened after having been suspended since August 2023 owing to availability problems with stock and bilingual crew
|}


Meinerzhagen - Brügge will reopen to passengers on 10 December 2017; the hourly RB25 service from Köln will then be extended to Lüdenscheid.
The following line opened on 3 February 2025


A short link between the Gera - Saalfeld and Gera - Weischlitz lines near Wolfsgefarth opened on 25 October 2016. See 'Closures' below.
{| class="osstable3"
| 372
| Hameln – Elze (Han)
| Reopened after having been closed since October 2023 for bridge repairs and resignalling works
|}


Tracklaying is complete on the high speed line between Erfurt and Ebensfeld, north of Bamberg, and test running has now started. The line is due to open in December 2017. It is unlikely that any other high speed lines will be built for some time, on environmental and financial grounds.
'''In the "tourist/museum line" sector''':


The new Berlin Brandenburg Airport (''Flughafen Berlin Brandenburg Willy Brandt''), a southward expansion of the existing Schönefeld airport, was scheduled to open on 3 June 2012. However, this was postponed indefinitely owing to delays in commissioning the fire safety system.  
The section of the Rahden – Uchte museum line between Rahden and a temporary platform 200 m short of Lavelsloh station reopened on 29 May 2025. The whole line had been closed since June 2021 because of the condition of the track. It is intended to reopen further sections towards Uchte in due course, with eventually the full line being reopened.
The new terminal is to the south of the runways. A new east-west line, underneath the terminal complex and parallel to the existing ''Berliner Außenring'', was completed in 2011. At its eastern end it uses part of the former Berlin-Schöneweide (Abzw Grünau) – Berlin ILA-Bahnhof (Schönefeld Flughafen Süd) line. At its western end it curves northwards towards the ''Außenring'', which it joins by means of a triangular junction, with curves facing both east and west. The east curve will carry only S-Bahn services, an extension of lines S9 and S45 from the existing Schönefeld-Flughafen station, which will terminate at the new station. The west curve and the line eastwards to Abzw Grünau will handle IC, ICE, RE and RB services to a variety of destinations. The airport authority has now stated that it will not open during 2017, but they hope to be able to announce a definitive 2018 date some time in 2017.


The ''Ilmetalbahn'' from Einbeck-Salzderhelden will reopen to passengers as far as Einbeck Mitte (4.2km) in December 2017. From December 2018, trains will run through to Göttingen.
A c. 13 km section of the ''Muldentalbahn'' between a temporary platform at Glauchau (Sachs) Reinholdshain and Wolkenburg was reopened for tourist services with the first day of service being 29 May 2025. It is not yet known how regular the days of operation will be.


Calw - Weil der Stadt will reopen in December 2018; the line will be known as the ''Hermann-Hesse-Bahn''.  Trains will run through to Renningen, sharing tracks with the S6 from Weil der Stadt.
A new c. 1 km-long branch of the metre-gauge horse tramway on the island of Spiekeroog opened on 6 May 2025, from a junction (Abzw Westend) shortly before the existing Westend terminus to a terminus known as Lütjeoogdünen. When new sea defences are built on the island, the existing Westend branch will be closed and all services will run to and from Lütjeoogdünen.


The ''Bentheimer Eisenbahn'' will reopen to passengers in December 2018 from Bad Bentheim as far as Neuenhaus.
=====2024=====


Gelsenkirchen-Buer Nord - Recklinghausen Hbf will reopen to passengers in December 2019, forming a second branch of the S9 service which currently terminates at Haltern am See.
The following line opened on 14 December 2024


The extension of the S28 Kaarst - Neuss - Düsseldorf - Mettmann service to Wuppertal-Vohwinkel and Wuppertal Hbf is under construction. It uses the existing freight-only route between Mettmann and Dornap-Hahnenfurth (which will be doubled) and is new construction from there to a junction with the Velbert - Wuppertal line just north of Wuppertal-Vohwinkel.  Doubling of the Neuss - Kaarst section is also planned, along with electrification of both the western (Neuss - Kaarst) and eastern (Düsseldorf-Gerresheim - Dornap-Hahnenfurth [- Wuppertal]) arms.  Completion of the entire project is expected in December 2019.
{| class="osstable3"
| 912
| Gunzenhausen – Wassertrüdingen
| Extension of existing ''RB62'' Pleinfeld – Gunzenhausen service
|}


====Projected Developments====
The following line opened on 29 July 2024
Rebuilding of Ducherow – Świnoujście (Poland) and Barth – Zingst (and possibly to Prerow) are included in the Federal Transport Infrastructure Plan, although Land Mecklenburg-Vorpommern has now said it intends to close Velgast - Barth in December 2017. The Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Development Plan now includes extension of the Mecklenburg Bäderbahn (Bad Doberan – Kühlungsborn West) westwards to Rerik and eastwards to Warnemünde. Niedersachsen has agreed that Salzgitter-Lebenstedt - Salzgitter-Fredenberg should be reopened (targeted for December 2018).


Contract negotiations have started for replacement of the Puttgarden - Rødby train ferry with the Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link, which will include the world's longest immersed tube tunnel. Completion is due in 2028. A double-track electrified line on a new alignment would be built between Lübeck and Puttgarden, replacing the existing single-track route, which would be closed.
{| class="osstable3"
| 209.26
| Küstrin-Kietz – Kostrzyn (PL)
| Reopened after being closed since December 2020 for replacement of the Oderbrücke
|}


Financing is agreed for Electrification from Ulm via Friedrichshafen to Lindau for completion by 2021. As a consequence this may become the last line to use Class 218 Diesels.
The following service officially opened on 27 June 2024, with public service from 29 June 2024.


====Actual Openings====
{| class="osstable3"
=====2016=====
{| width="85%"  
| 225
| Brieske – Hosena temporarily (until 24 September 2016) owing to closure of Ruhland - Hosena for engineering work
| 30 January
|-
| 482
| 482
| (Alsdorf Poststrasse -) Eschweiler-St.Jöris - Stolberg (Rheinl) Hbf
| Aachen - Maastricht (NL) - Liège (BE)
| 12 June
| Finally opened, through to Liège, after 6 years of delay due to technical challenges e.g. ETCS and even storm damage.
|-
|}
| 908
 
| Gotteszell - Viechtach [initially for a 2-year trial period]
The following line opened on 17 April 2024
| 13 September
 
{| class="osstable3"
| 434
| Rummenohl – Lüdenscheid-Brügge – Lüdenscheid
| Reopened after July 2021 flood damage
|}
|}


=====2015=====
The following line opened on 8 April 2024
{| width="85%"  
 
| 680
{| class="osstable3"
| Heimbach (Nahe) – Baumholder [deferred from 14 December 2014 by lack of sufficient crew to operate the service]
| 459
| 23 February
| Gummersbach Marienheide
|-
| Reopened after July 2021 flood damage
| 622
| Frankenberg (Eder) - Korbach
| 14 September
|-
| 209.23
| Ferch-Lienewitz – Beelitz-Heilstätten  (temporary diversion of Michendorf service until 10 December 2016)
| 13 December
|-
| 209.24
| Berlin Grünau – Berlin-Schöneweide – Berlin Ostkreuz – Berlin Lichtenberg
| 13 December
|-
| 230.5
| Görlitz – Zgorzelec (Poland)
| 13 December
|-
| 580
| Erfurt-Linderbach – Gröbers [- Leipzig] / Halle-Ammendorf
| 13 December
|-
| 720
| Konstanz – Kreuzlingen Hafen (Switzerland)
| 13 December
|-
| 858
| Selb-Plößberg Aš (Czech Republic)
| 13 December
|}
|}


=====2014=====
The following line opened on 7 January 2024
{| width="70%"  
 
| 247
{| class="osstable3"
| Dolni Poustevna ČD - Sebnitz   
| 428
| 5 July
| Recklinghausen Süd – Herne-Rottbruch [– Bochum-Riemke]
|-
| New ''RE41'' service direct from Recklinghausen Hbf to Bochum Hbf
| 305
| Uelzen W750 - Uelzen W23 (Veerßer Kurve)
| 15 April
|-
| 482
| Alsdorf Poststraße - Eschweiler-St.Jöris
| 15 June
|}
|}


=====2013=====
=====2023=====
{| width="70%"  
 
| 485
The following lines opened on 4 September 2023
| Lindern Heinsberg (Rheinl)
 
| 15 December
{| class="osstable3"
| ''RB TES''
| Erkner Fangschleuse Tesla Süd
| Shuttle service on Mondays to Fridays to serve Tesla electric car factory
|-
|-
| 501
| ''RB TES''
| Leipzig Nord/Leipzig-Gohlis Leipzig Hbf (tief) Leipzig-Stötteritz/Leipzig-Connewitz
| Biesdorfer Kreuz West Biesdorfer Kreuz Süd West Biesdorfer Kreuz Süd
| 15 December
| Used by one early morning service from Berlin-Lichtenberg to Fangschleuse Tesla Süd and one late evening return on weekdays only
|-
|-
| 501.1
| ''RB TES''
| Leipzig Stötteritz Leipzig Engelsdorf
| Biesdorfer Kreuz Süd Eichgestell Nord (''Außenring'')
| 15 December
| Used by one early morning service from Berlin-Lichtenberg to Fangschleuse Tesla Süd and one late evening return on weekdays only
|-
|-
| 710.41
| ''RB TES''
| Heilbronn Harmonie - Neckarsulm
| Eichgestell Nord – Berlin Stadtforst
| 15 December
| Used by one early morning service from Berlin-Lichtenberg to Fangschleuse Tesla Süd and one late evening return on weekdays only
|-
| 976
| [Ulm] - Senden - Weißenhorn
| 15 December
|}
|}


=====2012=====
The following line opened on 11 June 2023
{| width="80%"  
 
| 703
{| class="osstable3"
| [Müllheim(Baden) -] Neuenburg(Baden) - Mulhouse (France):. [full service in lieu of the former seasonal service]
| 236
| 9 December
| Varnsdorf Pivovar Kocour (CZ) – Seifhennersdorf
|-
| Rail service reinstated after 8-year 'temporary closure'
| 703
| Bad Bellingen - Efringen-Kirchen via new Katzenberg tunnel
| 9 December
|-
| 790.6
| Maichingen - Renningen
| 9 December
|}
|}


=====2011=====
=====2022=====
{| width="70%"  
 
| 751
The following lines opened on 11 December 2022
| Laupheim West south curve
 
| 12 June
{| class="osstable3"
| 209
| Genshagener Heide Ost – Abzw Birkengrund Süd 
| Used by extended ''FEX/RB32'' services to Ludwigsfelde
|-
|-
| 209.35
| 209.32 Nord
| Bad Saarow - Bad Saarow Klinikum
| Grünauer Kreuz West – Grünauer Kreuz Süd
| 24 October
| Used by ''RB24'' and new ''RB32'' to BER T5 (note ''RB32'' operates in two separate sections)
|-
|-
| 482
| 209.33
| (Herzogenrath -) Alsdorf-Annapark - Alsdorf-Mariadorf - Alsdorf-Poststraße
| Lienewitz Lia – Beelitz Bea
| 11 December
| Reinstated bridge over the Berlin – Bad Belzig line
|-
|-
| 650.1
| 690
| Darmstadt-Eberstadt - Pfungstadt
| Koblenz-Mosel Gbf – Koblenz Lützel (Koblenz avoiding curve)
| 11 December
| Used by one ''RB12'' Trier – Köln train pair daily as a replacement for direct services via Gerolstein, so possibly not beyond December 2025
|-
|-
| 439
| 750.1
| Brilon Wald - Brilon Stadt
| Ulm Hbf – Wendlingen Rübholz – Wendlingen Abzw W64 (''NBS'')
| 11 December
| New high-speed line, initially with connecting curve to Wendlingen (Neckar)
|}
|}


===Closures===
The following line opened on 1 November 2022
 
{| class="osstable3"
| 351
| Einbeck Mitte – Einbeck BBS/PS-Speicher
| Sparse weekday-only service over this section, experimental for three years
|}


The [http://www.ilztalbahn.eu Ilztalbahn] between Passau and Freyung was blocked by a landslip in April 2017 and it is not clear when, or if, the summer weekend service will be able to commence.
The following line opened on 24 June 2022


Brieske Hosena (KBS225) closed on 25 September 2016 having reopened temporarily from 30 January owing to closure of Ruhland - Hosena for engineering work.
{| class="osstable3"
| 393
| Sande Abzw Weißer Floh [– Schortens-Heidmühle]
| Brand new alignment well to the east of previous one
|}


The line between Pritzwalk and Putlitz closed on 31 July 2016, with the last trains running on 29 July.
The following line opened on 12 June 2022


A ca 4 km section of the Gera - Weischlitz line between Abzw. Gera Debschwitz and Wolfsgefarth closed on 24 October 2016 owing to the poor condition of a viaduct at Liebschwitz. It was replaced by a short link to the Gera - Saalfeld line near Wolfsgefarth.
{| class="osstable3"
| 333 (PKP)
| Guben – Guben Grenze [– Gubin (PL)]
| Initially weekend-only service; daily from December 2022
|}


Hamburg Altona is scheduled to close in 2023 with a replacement main line through station being built roughly on the site of the current Diebsteich S-Bahn station.
The following line opened on 21 May 2022


Land Sachsen has said that the following lines would have to be considered for closure if insufficient funding is available to support passenger services. The federal government has given an additional EUR 200m to the ''Neue Länder'' and some services previously thought to be at risk have now been retendered.
{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"  
| 190
| 229
| Sassnitz-Mukran Abzw Borchtitz Sassnitz-Mukran Fährhafen
| Hoyerswerda – Niesky – Abzw Mückenhain [Kodersdorf]
| Limited summer service to connect with Ystad and Bornholm ferries
| Currently bus substituted
|-
| 248
| Pirna – Neustadt (Sachs) – Sebnitz (Sachs)
| Neustadt – Sebnitz is the most likely line to close; Pirna – Neustadt may survive
|-
| 520
| Mittweida  –  Döbeln  –  Riesa  –  Elsterwerda
|
|-
| 523
| St Egidien  Stollberg (Sachs)
|
|-
| 524
| Aue (Sachs) – Thalheim
| Was planned to close in December 2017 but latest plans imply that it may survive as a tram-train service under the ''"Chemnitzer Modell"'' Stage 2, to be implemented in 2019
|
|-
| 539
| Falkenstein – Klingenthal
|
|-
| 544
| Adorf (Vogtl) – Bad Brambach
|
|}
|}


The following lines are planned for closure in December 2017:
The following line opened on 29 January 2022
 
{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| 173
| 524
| Waren (Müritz) - Inselstadt Malchow
| Chemnitz Technopark – Chemnitz-Reichenhain (Abzw Chemnitz Süd Straßenbahn)
|
| New tram-train connection onto reconstructed Chemnitz – Aue line
|-
| 192
| Velgast - Barth
|
|-  
| 594 (part)
| Buttstädt - Großheringen
|
|-
|}
|}


The line between Ihrhove and Nieuweschans closed after a ship hit and destroyed the main span of the bridge over the River Ems on 3 December 2015.  According to a press release from DB in October 2016, the bridge will be completely rebuilt with the damaged or destroyed sections replaced, and the rest refurbished, including the piers. The new bridge is intended to be in service by 2021 at the latest, but if tests go well, it is hoped that this date can be brought forward to late 2020.  The train service on the German section west of the bridge, between Nieuweschans and Weener,  resumed on 30 October 2016.
'''In the "tourist/museum line" sector''':


The preserved service on the ''Bremen-Thedinghausener Eisenbahn'' (''"Pingelheini"'') between Bremen-Kirchhuchting and Leeste (b. Bremen) ceased at the end of the 2015 season. Services still operate between Leeste and Thedinghausen. It is planned to convert the Bremen - Leeste line between Moordeich and Leeste to an extension of Bremen tram route no. 8, although local opposition to the tram service has delayed the project indefinitely. If the tramway goes ahead, the ''Pingelheini'' hopes to resume service to Bremen, sharing the track with the trams.
The ''Museums-Eisenbahn Minden'' resumed operation over the long-closed section between Preußisch Oldendorf and Bad Holzhausen on their line to Bohmte on 26 May 2022.


The current S-Bahn line between Frankfurt am Main Stadion and Frankfurt am Main Flughafen Regionalbahnhof is to be replaced by a new railway on a different route, probably from December 2019.
=====2021=====


The following lines closed on 13 December 2015:
The following lines opened on 20 December 2021


{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| 209.23 (part)
| 440
| Ferch-Lienewitz Seddin
| Hagen-Kabel Hagen-Vorhalle
| Trains temporarily diverted to Beelitz-Heilstätten until December 2016
| Curve between Siegen and Witten lines used by new ''IC34'' services to/from Dortmund
|-
|-  
| 506 (part)  
| 440
| Döbeln Hbf – Roßwein – Nossen – Meißen Triebischtal
| Hagen-Kabel – Westhofen (Westf)
| Curve between Siegen and Unna lines used by new ''IC34'' services to/from Hamm
|}
|}


The following line closed on 26 September 2015:
The following lines opened on 12 December 2021


{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| R61 [WEG]
| 209.35
| Hemmingen Heimerdingen Weissach
| Bad Saarow Klinikum Bad Saarow-Pieskow
| Hemmingen Heimerdingen is a temporary closure owing to engineering work
|
|-
| Augsburg Tramway
| Haunstetten West Königsbrunn Zentrum
| Line 3, southern extension
|-
| Stuttgart LRT
| Fasanenhof Schelmenwasen Flughafen/Messe Ost
| Line U6, south-eastern extension
|}
|}


The following line closed to regular services on 12 April 2015:
The following line opened on 11 December 2021


{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| 337
| Karlsruhe LRT
| Klostermansfeld - Wippra
| ''Kombilösung'' cross-city tram tunnels
| However a summer weekend service operates
| Lines 1, 2 and S2 diverted into the tunnel on 11 December followed by AVG lines S1/11, S4, S5/51, S7 and S8 on 12 December
|}
|}


The following line closed on 1 April 2015:
The following line opened on 29 November 2021


{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| 172 (part)
| 627, 646
| ''Mecklenburgische Südbahn'': Parchim - Inselstadt Malchow
| Frankfurt am Main Hbf – Abzw Mainzer Landstraße
|  
| New exit line to the north of Frankfurt Außenbahnhof
|}
|}


The following line closed on 1 March 2015:
The following line opened on 8 August 2021


{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| 230
| 732
| Görlitz - Zgorzelec (Poland)
| Sauldorf – Stockach
| The Dresden - Wrocław service was withdrawn owing to a reduction in funding for Przewozy Regionalne. Services were reintroduced from 13 December 2015.
| Summer Sundays only. Reopening delayed by flood damage
|}
|}


The following line closed on 31 December 2014:
The following line opened on 18 July 2021


{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| 218
| 732
| Pratau Bad Schmiedeberg Kurzentrum
| Mengen Sauldorf
| However a summer weekend service operates
| Summer Sundays only
|}
|}


The Paris - Hamburg/Berlin/München overnight service was withdrawn at the December 2014 timetable change.
====Permanent Closures====


The following lines closed on 14 December 2014:
Note that in most cases the lines remain available for empty stock, freight, diversionary or charter services.


=====2025=====
The following lines closed on 23 September 2025
{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| 517
| former 203, 240
| Cranzahl Vejprty (Czech Republic)
| Großbeeren Süd Genshagener Heide Mitte
| However a summer weekend service operates
| Berlin – Elsterwerda/Dresden ''RE'' and ''IC/EC'' services diverted via Schönefeld owing to engineering work; when these diversions cease on 14 December 2025 they will run via the reinstated ''Dresdner Bahn''
|-
|-
| 588
| former 203, 240
| Merseburg Schafstädt
| Glasower Damm West Glasower Damm Süd
|  
| ''as above''
|}
|}


The København - Basel/Amsterdam/Praha overnight service was withdrawn on 1 November 2014
=====2024=====


The following line closed on 15 December 2013:
The following line closed on 19 October 2024
{| class="osstable3"
| 440
| Hagen-Kabel – Abzw Hohensyburg [– Westhofen (Westf.)]
| The two ''IC'' services each way over this curve diverted to run via Dortmund
|}
 
'''In the "tourist/museum line" sector''':
 
Scheduled services on the ''Wisentatalbahn'' museum line between Schönberg (Vogtl) and Schleiz West ceased after farewell trips on 9 and 10 March 2024, and after a very last farewell excursion on 13 March from Zittau, the line was closed to all traffic. This is because the line's leaseholders Deutsche Regionaleisenbahn GmbH (DRE) wished to terminate the lease and no other undertaking offered to take it on.
 
=====2023=====
The following line closed on 7 August 2023
{| class="osstable3"
| Ruhrbahn Tram route 104 (part)
| Mülheim (Ruhr) Wertgasse – Oppspring
| Also depot journeys from Berliner Platz to Wertgasse
|}


The following line closed on 15 April 2023
{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| 519
| 415.2
| Pockau-Lengefeld – Marienberg (Sachs.)
| Dortmund Signal Iduna-Park (Westfalenhalle) – Dortmund-Lütgendortmund Flm – Bochum-Langendreer
|  
| ''RE11'' services reverted to running via Dortmund Hbf and Hamm
|}
|}


The following lines closed on 9 December 2012:
'''In the "tourist/museum line" sector:'''


In June 2025 it was announced that the 'temporary' closure of the 2.8 km-long section of the [https://www.kleinbahnexpress.de/ ''Kleinbahn Verden – Walsrode''] between Neddenaverbergen and Stemmen would be made permanent as a result of track repairs being required at a cost of 3 million Euros, which neither the preservation association nor the local authority can afford to pay. The last trains over this section ran in 2023. Some local politicians are even talking about converting the entire line to a cycle path.
=====2022=====
The following lines closed on 11 December 2022
{| class="osstable3"
{| class="osstable3"
| 183
| 209.23
| Rostock Hbf Rostock Seehafen Nord
| Abzw Lienewitz Lia Seddin Bla
|  
| Replaced by new ''RB33'' Potsdam – Jüterbog service
|-
|-
| 539
| 209.63
| Adorf (Vogtl.) – Zwotental
| Joachimsthal – Templin Stadt
|  
| Experimental service reinstatement ended
|}
 
The following line closed on 31 August 2022
{| class="osstable3"
| 140
| Neustadt (Holst.) Gbf Puttgarden <br> (including the curves to Fehmarn-Burg)
| Closed for complete reconstruction, mainly on a new alignment, in connection with the Fehmarn Belt Tunnel project
|}
|}
The following line closed on 27 March 2022
{| class="osstable3"
| 393
| Sande - Abzw Weißer Floh [- Schortens-Heidmühle]
| Replaced by new double-track alignment to the east
|}
=====2021=====
'''In the "tourist/museum line" sector:
The ''Oleftalbahn'' between Kall and Hellenthal sustained severe damage over 90% of its length in the devastating floods of 14/15 July 2021. On 7 June 2024 the line's owners Rhein-Sieg-Eisenbahn GmbH announced their intention to close it officially to all traffic. It therefore appears that the line saw its last train in 2021, unless a proposal to reinstate regular passenger services comes to fruition, which seems unlikely.
===Future Changes===
====Forthcoming Openings====
=====2025=====
The main line tracks (closed 1952) alongside the ''S-Bahn'' on the ''Dresdner Bahn'' from Berlin Südkreuz to Blankenfelde (Kr. Teltow-Fläming) have been reinstated. Services on the new line will commence on 14 December 2025. The new line will speed up trains between Berlin and Elsterwerda and Dresden and also allow a fast service to Berlin-Brandenburg airport via a brand-new curve (the ''Mahlower Kurve'') between Glasower Damm Nord and Glasower Damm Ost. The reopening of the ''Dresdner Bahn'' will mean the end of regular passenger services over the curves from Genshagener Heide Mitte to Großbeeren Süd and from Glasower Damm West to Glasower Damm Süd.
The reopening to regular services of the Kiel to Schönberger Strand branch, which is currently only a tourist line beyond Kiel-Oppendorf, has been heavily and repeatedly delayed. The line is now due to open in three stages: as far as Schönkirchen in December 2025, to Probsteierhagen in Dec. 2026 and finally to Schönberger Strand in December 2027.
The reopening of Calw - Weil der Stadt has been put back by at least one year every year since 2018. It has apparently now been confirmed as 'definitely opening' in December 2025, some seven years after originally planned. Reasons for the delays include legal action, which has been dismissed, and the decision to build a new section of line in tunnel to shorten the route between Ostelsheim and Weil der Stadt. The line will be known as the ''Hermann-Hesse-Bahn'' and run through to Renningen, sharing tracks with the ''S6'' from Weil der Stadt.
=====2026=====
The ''Bentheimer Eisenbahn'' from Bad Bentheim to Coevorden (NL), which was reopened in 2019 as far as Neuenhaus, is planned to be reopened through to Coevorden (NL) on 13 December 2026.
Reopening to passengers of the WLE Münster (Westf) Hbf to Neubeckum line as far as Sendenhorst is now planned for December 2026.
A temporary weekend- and holiday-only passenger service ran in summer 2020 from Duisburg and Moers to Kamp-Lintfort Süd in connection with a garden festival, thus reintroducing trains to the former colliery branch from Rheinkamp. Full passenger services are planned for 2026, via a new south to west curve at Rheinkamp. The branch will be extended to a new Kamp-Lintfort station, beyond the former mine area.
The new high-speed line (''NBS'') between Ulm and Stuttgart opened on 11 December 2022 between Ulm and Wendlingen. The remaining section between Wendlingen and Stuttgart Hbf is not now due to open until December 2026.
The first stage of the Berlin ''S-Bahn'' line linking the ''Innenring'' with Berlin Hbf (Invalidenstraße) by an east to south curve from Wedding has been severely delayed and is not now due to open until "spring 2026". The line failed its acceptance test due to insufficient power supply and it was announced in June 2025 that this would have to be replaced. It will initially run between Hauptbahnhof and Gesundbrunnen only, under the designation ''S15''. The intermediate station at Perleberger Brücke is not due to open until 2029. A west to south curve from Westhafen to Invalidenstraße is expected to open later, and plans are to extend the line to Potsdamer Platz in Stage 2 and Yorckstraße in Stage 3, thus creating a second north-south ''S-Bahn'' line (to be known as ''S21'') through central Berlin. Opening of the entire line is not expected until 2037.
<!---0.000 WESTHAFEN <br>
0.857 PERLEBERGER BRÜCKE <br>
1.600 Junction at bottom of triangle<br>
1.821 Tunnel Portal<br>
2.357 HAUPTBAHNHOF  (middle of platform)<br> <br>
   
0.000 WEDDING<br>
0.800 PERLEBERGER BRÜCKE<br>
1.700 Junction at bottom of triangle 1.700 = 1.600<br>
1.600 Junction at bottom of triangle<br>
1.821 Tunnel Portal<br>
2.357 HAUPTBAHNHOF  (middle of platform; 2.457 from Wedding)--->
=====2027=====
An extension of the Stolberg (Rheinland) Hbf to Stolberg Altstadt passenger service to Breinig (now a part of Stolberg so officially known as Stolberg-Breinig) is not now due to open until 2027. Progress was originally delayed by the need to lower the trackbed under a bridge at Stolberg Altstadt to provide safe clearance for the overhead wires, and by serious damage sustained to the existing line in the July 2021 floods.
Reopening of the northern section of the Gessertshausen - Markt Wald ''Staudenbahn'' as far as Langenneufnach has been agreed with the much-delayed construction (including electrification) beginning in 2026 and opening scheduled for December 2027.
The TWE (Teutoburger Wald-Eisenbahn) is to be reopened in December 2027 between Harsewinkel, Gütersloh and Verl (Bz Detmold).
A new ''S4'' line of the ''S-Bahn Hamburg'' is under construction. It will run from the existing ''S1'' station of Hasselbrook to Bad Oldesloe. It will have its own new formation from Hasselbrook to Ahrensburg-Gartenholz, which will be double-track from Hasselbrook to Ahrensburg and single-track to Gartenholz, where it will merge with the existing Hamburg to Lübeck main line. The new line will have 1200 V dc third-rail electrification as far as Bovestraße, just beyond the former Wandsbek station, and 15 kV ac overhead electrification from there to Gartenholz. The first section as far as Hamburg-Rahlstedt is due to open in 2027, with the remainder following in 2029. The second stage may be delayed by up to a year by planning permission objections.
It is planned to introduce a regular passenger service between Bremervörde and Stade by the end of 2027. Currently only the summer weekend trains between Bremen and Stade run on this route.
Work was due to start in January 2024 on the reactivation of the ''Horlofftalbahn'' between Wölfersheim-Södel and Hungen, but these works will now not start until late 2026, with reopening delayed until December 2027 at the earliest.
The first 2.9 km of the Wrist - Itzehoe line as far as Kellinghusen is to be reopened. Financing was agreed in December 2019 after years of procrastination, but opening has been deferred until 2027 at the earliest; mainly, it is reported, because of flood protection issues in Kellinghusen. New overhead electrification masts are visible on the branch from passing trains on the main line, so progress is definitely being made, albeit slowly.
=====2028=====
Stuttgart ''S-Bahn'' line ''S2'' is to be extended by 4 km by reopening the route between Filderstadt and Neuhausen auf den Fildern, which was closed to passengers in 1955, and completely in 1983. Financing was approved in late 2022 with construction starting in mid-2023. Opening is now delayed until December 2028.
The reopening and electrification of Homburg (Saar) to Einöd (Saar) is planned for December 2028, with construction due to start in autumn 2025. The electrification will extend over the existing line to Zweibrücken to allow through electric ''S-Bahn'' services from Homburg.
An extension of Kassel ''RegioTram'' route ''RT5'' from Melsungen to Melsungen Süd is now planned to come into service in 2028, some five years later than originally planned. The station at Melsungen Süd will be on a short spur just off the main line.
Provisionally in December 2028 the AKN (Altona-Kaltenkirchen-Neumünster Eisenbahn) line from Hamburg Eidelstedt to Kaltenkirchen will be electrified at 15 kV AC and incorporated into the Hamburg ''S-Bahn'' as an extension of the ''S5'' which will then no longer terminate at Elbgaustrasse.
A west-to-south curve is under construction to link the Lübeck - Bad Kleinen line with the main line to Schwerin, avoiding Bad Kleinen. To be known as the ''Gallentiner Kurve'', this will allow direct trains to run between Lübeck and Schwerin. Work started in June 2025 with an estimated opening date of 2028.
=====2029=====
The ''Euregiobahn'' line from Herzogenrath to Stolberg (Rheinl.) via Alsdorf-Annapark is to be extended with an electrified branch line from Alsdorf-Kellersberg to Alsdorf-Mariagrube. This is planned for December 2029. A further extension to Aldenhoven-Siersdorf is planned for December 2033. An invitation to tender for these services was issued in August 2025.
Preliminary work has started on the reconstruction of the closed 4.46 km Berlin ''S-Bahn'' branch from Jungfernheide to Gartenfeld. Known as the ''Siemensbahn'', as it served the large factory of that firm, the last train ran on September 17 1980. With the closure of the factory in 2018, a research campus and large residential development is being built on the site. Reopening of the line is planned for Autumn 2029. A study is underway for a possible new-build extension to Hakenfelde.
Reopening of the line from Wittgensdorf to Limbach-Oberfrohna is planned as Stage 4 of the ''Chemnitzer Modell'' tram-train system. This is targeted for late 2029.
=====2030=====
The Barth - Zingst - Prerow <i>Darßbahn</i> is to be reopened. Tripartite funding, split between the federal government, <i>Land</i> Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and the Usedomer Bäderbahn has been agreed for the reconstruction of the ''Meiningenbrücke'' road/rail bridge just north of Bresewitz, which will allow reopening of the entire line to Prerow. This is now targeted for 2030.
=====2031=====
In February 2024 final approval was given to extending Berlin ''U-Bahn'' line ''U3'' from Krumme Lanke to Mexikoplatz where a new interchange with the ''S-Bahn'' will be available. It is planned to open in 2031.
=====2032=====
The ''Vögelfluglinie'' railway between [Lübeck -] Bad Schwartau and the island of Fehmarn is being completely rebuilt. It will be a double-track electrified railway, mostly on a new alignment which will in part run alongside the A1 ''Autobahn''. The existing line from Lübeck to Puttgarden closed north of Neustadt (Holst.) Gbf on 30 August 2022. On reopening, it will form part of a new high-speed line to København via the Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link, which will include the world's longest immersed tube tunnel. Neustadt (Holst.) will be served by a link from Haffkrug on the new line to the existing line via Sierksdorf, which will become a branch line. The old route from Ratekau to Haffkrug through Timmendorfer Strand will be abandoned, as will the sections north of Neustadt, through Lensahn and Oldenburg (Holst.) and from Fehmarn-Burg to the previous terminus at Puttgarden. Most stations on the old route will have replacements on the new route, but they will be at some distance from the towns they are intended to serve, especially at Timmendorfer Strand. The railway on the Danish side is also being reconstructed. Opening of the new line was originally planned for 2029, but in July 2025 the Federal Ministry of Transport announced that it would not be ready until 2032.
The Niederbarnimer Eisenbahn is rebuilding the line from Berlin-Wilhelmsruh to Wilhelmsruher Damm, therefore reopening the ''Heidekrautbahn'' between Bornholmer Straße and Schönwalde (Barnim) to passenger service for trains from Berlin-Gesundbrunnen to Basdorf and beyond. This was originally planned for December 2024 but may now be as late as 2032. The existing line via Berlin-Karow will be retained.
====Projected Developments====
'''Note''': As this section has become extremely large, it has been rearranged into sub-sections for each ''Land'', and in approximate date order (earliest projected opening to latest or undated) in each section. Note that any scheme that has '''definitely been given the go-ahead and has a concrete opening date''' (even if this is likely to slip) should be in "Forthcoming Openings" above, under the appropriate year heading.
=====Baden-Württemberg=====
The District (''Landkreis'') of Tübingen is planning to convert some lines in their area to a tram-train system known as ''Regional-Stadtbahn Neckar-Alb''. This involves construction of a new line known as the ''Gomaringer Spange'' between Nehren, on the Tübingen - Balingen line, and Reutlingen. This will partially re-use the formation of the Reutlingen West to Gomaringen branch. Other plans include the reopening of the Albstadt-Ebingen to Albstadt-Onstmettingen and Engstingen to Reutlingen lines, and the introduction of a regular passenger service between Hechingen and Burladingen on the line to Gammertingen. Tramway-style lines into Tübingen town centre and through Reutlingen are also planned.
Reopening of the line across the Rhein between Breisach and Colmar (France) is planned.
Reopening of Ludwigsburg - Markgröningen is also under consideration.
=====Bayern=====
A new ''S-Bahn'' line between Fürth (Bayern) Hbf and Eltersdorf via Fürth-Steinach is planned but construction has been delayed by legal challenges. The new ''S-Bahn'' lines will be brought into use where they run parallel to the main lines, but the original line between Fürth-Stadeln (north of Fürth Klinikum) and Königsmühle (south of Eltersdorf) will remain a two-track bottleneck until the ''S-Bahn'' deviation is eventually opened. This is not now expected until the mid-2030s. A freight bypass in tunnel, avoiding Fürth Hbf by linking the west end of the Nürnberg southern ring line with Eltersdorf, is also planned.
Dombühl - Dinkelsbühl was planned for reopening to passengers in December 2019, but this has been deferred. It is still planned to open the line to Dinkelsbühl or even Wilburgstetten, but a definite date for this is not currently known.
The Landshut (Bay) – Plattling line is to be upgraded with four new passing loops and two extended ones. A short section of the line will be doubled and line-speed improvements are planned. These improvements will allow a half-hourly service on the ''RE3'' "Donau-Isar Express" service between Passau and München. Also planned is a single-track curve to the west of Plattling, linking the Landshut and Regensburg lines, but this may only be intended for use by freight, primarily traffic to and from the large BMW factory at Dingolfing.
Reopening of the ''Münchener Güternordring'' (München northern freight ring line) for passenger transport is planned.
=====Berlin and Brandenburg=====
The ''Potsdamer Stammbahn'' (Zehlendorf to Griebnitzsee) is projected to reopen, to give a more direct route between Berlin and Potsdam for regional trains. The main line tracks from Schöneberg to Zehlendorf through Rathaus Steglitz, out of service since the war and subsequently lifted, will also be reinstated, along with a possible curve to the ''Innenring'' at Schöneberg. This may not occur until the early 2030s.
Planning work has started to reopen the ''S-Bahn'' line from Spandau to Falkensee in the early 2030s. It was closed in 1961.
Other projects in the [https://www.i2030.de/ i2030 scheme] for rail development in Berlin and Brandenburg include:
* Reopening of the ''S2'' from Blankenfelde to Rangsdorf along the ''Dresdner Bahn'', in conjunction with the rebuilding of the long-distance lines north of Blankenfelde
* Extension of the ''S21'' from Teltow Stadt over a new-build line to Stahnsdorf
* Extension of the ''S75'' along the ''Außenring'' to Karow
* Reopening of the ''S25'' between Hennigsdorf and Velten (Mark).
Reinstatement of regional tracks between Schönholz and Hennigsdorf to give a more direct route to the Wittstock line was considered but has been discounted on cost grounds. However capacity improvements between Velten (Mark) and Neuruppin are still going ahead.
Longer term it is planned to build a new ''S-Bahn'' line from Grünau to Springfühl via Wuhlheide. Plans for this line were already developed by the DDR in the 1980s.
=====Hessen=====
The ''Lumdatalbahn'' (Lollar – Mainzlar – Londorf) is registered for inclusion in a federal funding package for reopening.
The following lines are also under consideration for reopening:
* Neu-Isenburg Bf – Neu-Isenburg Stadtzentrum
* Kirchhain - Nieder-Gemünden (''mittelhessische Ohmtalbahn'')
* Darmstadt - Groß-Zimmern
* Wiesbaden - Diez (in Rheinland-Pfalz) (''Aartalbahn'')
=====Mecklenburg-Vorpommern=====
''Land'' Mecklenburg-Vorpommern published an invitation to tender in 2024 which included reinstatement of passenger services between Hagenow Stadt and Zarrentin (23.9 km) from December 2025. This line lost its passenger trains in May 2000. However in the award of the tender in November 2025 for Parchim area services to ODEG (the incumbent operator), there was no mention of any extension to Zarrentin. Apparently it remains an objective but requires federal funding and any new service is not expected to start until 2028 at the earliest, if at all.
In August 2023, the ''Länder'' of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Brandenburg launched their [https://www.regierung-mv.de/Aktuell/?id=194115&processor=processor.sa.pressemitteilung review] into the development and potential reopening of all or part of the so-called ''Karower Kreuz'' network radiating from Karow (Meckl). This covers the north-south Neustadt (Dosse) – Pritzwalk – Meyenburg – Karow – Güstrow route which has sparse services south of Meyenburg and is closed north of there apart from summer weekend services between Karow and Plau am See, and the east-west ''Mecklenburger Südbahn'' (Parchim – Waren (Müritz)) which only has summer weekend services between Parchim and Inselstadt Malchow.
In early 2020, the Prime Minister and Transport Minister of <i>Land</i> Mecklenburg-Vorpommern restated their commitment to the rebuilding of Ducherow – Świnoujście/Swinemünde (Poland) but as this project would involve complete reconstruction of the bridge at Karnin between the mainland and the island of Usedom, this would appear to be a long-term aspiration.
=====Niedersachsen=====
Plans to re-open the line between Salzgitter-Lebenstedt and Salzgitter-Fredenberg surface every few years. The most recent study, which reported in early 2025, concluded that reopening was viable so some progress may at last be made on this scheme. The line is planned to be built and owned by the ''Land'' Niedersachsen-owned infrastructure company SinON (Schieneninfrastruktur Ost-Niedersachsen, formerly OHE) as this will be quicker and cheaper than having it built by DB InfraGO.
Reopening of Buchholz (Nordheide) - Hamburg-Harburg via Jesteburg is under consideration.
=====Nordrhein-Westfalen=====
In early 2023, the new public transport authority for the Köln/Aachen areas, known as go.Rheinland, announced its plans for the networks of 2032 and 2040. By 2032 the following lines are planned to be reopened to passengers:
* Linnich – Hückelhoven-Baal
* Erkelenz – Baal – Ratheim
* Stolberg-Breinig – Walheim – Eupen (BE).
By 2040 further reopenings are planned:
* Ratheim – Wassenberg
* Dalheim – Roermond (NL)
* Köln-Mülheim – Opladen via Morsbroich
* Köln Frankfurter Straße – Köln Süd via the Südbrücke
* Gummersbach-Dieringhausen – Waldbröl (although a study in 2023 rejected potential reopening of this line as too costly given the likely demand and poor journey time to Köln).
The following lines have also been mentioned as possible candidates for reopening:
* Oberhausen - Spellen (''Walsumbahn'')
* Duisburg Hbf - Düsseldorf-Rath (''Ratinger Weststrecke'')
* Kellersberg – Baesweiler
=====Rheinland-Pfalz=====
The Langenlonsheim – Büchenbeuren ''Hunsrückquerbahn'', which has been without regular traffic for over 20 years, is in the process of being reactivated for freight traffic, which is expected to start running some time in 2025. It is intended at some point to start running passenger trains over the route as well.
=====Saarland=====
''Land'' Saarland announced in mid-2025 that it was to go ahead with the reopening of three branch lines by the early 2030s:
* Dillingen (Saar) – Schmelz-Limbach (21.3 km), plus the connecting line to the existing Lebach-Jabach station (3 km) (''Primstalbahn'')
* Saarbrücken – Völklingen-Fürstenhausen – Großrosseln (15.1 km) (''Rosseltalbahn'')
* Völklingen-Fürstenhausen – Überherrn (17.4 km) (''Bisttalbahn'').
All three lines are expected to become part of a new Saarbrücken ''S-Bahn'' system, with lightweight tram-trains to be used on the latter two lines.
=====Sachsen=====
As Stage 5 of the ''Chemnitzer Modell'' tram-train network, a new connection is planned between Stollberg (Sachs) station and the line to St. Egidien. This will run south of Stollberg station on the formation of the former line to Zwönitz, then run west and north around Stollberg as a completely new-build line, joining the existing line to St. Egidien a few hundred metres east of Niederwürschnitz station. Once this section is open, the existing line from the north end of Stollberg station towards Niederwürschnitz will presumably close. Services over the new line will be extended from St. Egidien to run to Glauchau (Sachs).
In July 2024, DB RegioNetz Infrastruktur GmbH published an invitation to tender for the planning phase of the reopening to passengers of the line between Pockau-Lengefeld and Marienberg. A planned date for reopening is not yet known.
=====Sachsen-Anhalt=====
Reopening of part of the ''Kanonenbahn'' over the bridge over the river Elbe between Gnadau, Barby and Güterglück is under consideration.
'''In the "tourist/museum line" sector'''
The [https://www.warnetalbahn-gmbh.de/ Warnetalbahn GmbH], which operates the museum line between Salzgitter-Bad and Börßum, took a lease in December 2019 of the line between Rottleberode and Stolberg (Harz), with the intention to run freight (timber) trains and occasional tourist passenger services. The branch from Berga-Kelbra closed to passengers in December 2011 and had been conmpetely out of service since then. Unfortunately because of the condition of a bridge over the river Thyra at Rottleberode, the reintroduction of regular services to Stolberg has been postponed indefinitely, although occasional excursion trains have run since December 2022.
=====Schleswig-Holstein=====
Reopening of approximately 3 km of the Rendsburg - Husum line as far as a new station at Rendsburg-Seemühlen is planned, with two new intermediate halts.
====Planned permanent closures (without replacement)====
With the timetable change on 14 December 2025, it is expected that Regional services to and from Schönefeld (b. Berlin) (the former Flughafen Schönefeld station, latterly Flughafen BER Terminal 5) will cease, thus leaving the curve between Grünauer Kreuz West and Grünauer Kreuz Süd and the section of the ''Außenring'' between Grünauer Kreuz Süd and Schönefeld with little or no service. This will leave Schönefeld station served only by the ''S-Bahn''; given the extremely low demand at the station since the closure of Terminal 5, this would appear to be more than adequate.
The weekend-only extension of the ''RB27'' service between Wensickendorf and Schmachtenhagen is to cease from the December 2025 timetable change. Services used to run to serve a farmers' market at Schmachtenhagen but that apparently has closed, so the demand for the service has dried up. Services on the section between Basdorf and Wensickendorf will be cut back to weekday peak-hours only at the same time.
The peak-hour ''RE8'' trains between Berlin and Finsterwalde (Niederlausitz) will be withdrawn from the December 2025 timetable change. This will leave the north to east curve at Doberlug (Abzw Doberlug-Kirchhain Nord) – Abzw Hennersdorf West) without passenger services.
There has been some doubt about the future of services on the Neustadt (Dosse) – Pritzwalk line (KBS 209.73), particularly the section between Kyritz Am Burgerpark and Pritzwalk, and on the Pritzwalk West – Pritzwalk – Meyenburg line (KBS 209.74) for several years. Between August 2025 and April 2026, the section between Wusterhausen (Dosse) and Neustadt (Dosse) will be closed to allow reconstruction of the main line through Neustadt. After some initial misunderstandings, ''Land'' Brandenburg has assured the local councils in the area that the entire Neustadt – Pritzwalk – Meyenburg line is to be retained at least in the short term, with a tender issued in June 2025 for services for 36 months from December 2025.
'''In the "tourist/museum line" sector:'''
In August 2025, the Ministry for Infrastructure and Development of ''Land'' Sachsen approved the request of the owners of the Adorf (Vogtl) – Zwotental line (Regio Infra Service Sachsen GmbH (RIS)) to close it from December 2025. This will mean an end to the ''Musikwinkel-Express'' tourist service and other excursions that use the line. The 12.7 km-long line lost its scheduled passenger services in December 2012, by which time they only ran at weekends. Local politicians are opposing the closure, not least because one branch of the Sachsen government (the tourism department) had supported the venture with grants while another branch decided to close it down.
====Planned permanent closures (with replacement)====
As a result of the reinstatement of the main-line tracks of the ''Dresdner Bahn'' between Berlin Südkreuz and Glasower Damm, expected on 14 December 2025, the following line is expected to lose most if not all of its services, as the ''FEX'' (Flughafen-Express) service will be replaced with a new airport express service via Glasower Damm.
* Berlin Gesundbrunnen – Berlin Ostkreuz via the ''Ringbahn Ferngleise''.
The main-line terminus station at Hamburg-Altona is due to close with a replacement through station being built roughly on the site of the previous Diebsteich ''S-Bahn'' station. The low-level ''S-Bahn'' station at Altona will remain, although with a change of name to "Mitte Altona". According to the [https://www.bahnprojekt-hamburg-altona.de/ project website] the planned opening date of the new Altona main-line station is 2027. The proposed track layout and usage can be seen [http://prellbock-altona.de/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Altona-Diebsteich-Gleisplan-schematisch-kpl-b-bunt_sbahn_edited.png here].
There have been numerous deviations of railways to allow open-cast mining. There will be a significant re-routing of the Görlitz to Cottbus line, with the the closure of around 10 km of the existing line between Weißwasser and Rietschen, to be replaced by a 13 km-long deviation to the east. Work is due to start in March 2024 with the line opening in June 2027. See [http://tinyurl.com/murj3vbw this DB pdf] about the project.
The mainline tracks between Stuttgart-Vaihingen and Stuttgart Hbf (line 4860, part of the ''Gäubahn'') will close permanently at end of traffic on 23 April 2026. They will eventually be replaced by a new tunnel connection to the underground Hauptbahnhof and the new line to Ulm but this is not expected to open until December 2032. Until the new line opens, passengers from the southwest, including those on ''IC'' trains from Zürich, will have to change to the ''S-Bahn'' at Stuttgart-Vaihingen.
It is planned to build a new Fangschleuse station on the Berlin - Franfurt (Oder) line, west of the existing one at the north end of a currently under construction extension to the Tesla electric car factory. This station is expected to replace both the current Fangschleuse station and Fangschleuse Tesla Süd, the latter only opened on 4 September 2023 serving the existing part of the factory. This will mean the withdrawal of the passenger service from Erkner to Fangschleuse Tesla Süd via a previously freight only branch, with presumably complete closure of the approx. 0.5 km line off the GVZ freight branch into the station itself. A date for this closure is not yet known.
====Temporary closures====
=====Baden-Württemberg=====
Electrification from Basel Badischer Bahnhof to Erzingen (Baden) (KBS 730) is due to start in September 2025 with completion scheduled for the December 2027 timetable change. During the work there will be no trains between Rheinfelden and Erzingen from April 2026 until March 2027. The closure will then be reduced to Rheinfelden to Erzingen which should reopen in July 2027.
=====Bayern=====
The Nürnberg to Bayreuth line has been closed between Hersbruck (rechts Pegnitz) and Pegnitz since 18 September 2025 because of the poor condition of two bridges. The line is not expected to reopen until February 2026. Trains to and from Neukirchen via the connecting line to the links Pegnitz route are unaffected.
=====Berlin and Brandenburg=====
Between 2 August 2025 and 30 April 2026, the ''Hamburger Bahn'' between Berlin and Hamburg will be closed for almost all of its length (between Berlin-Spandau and the outskirts of Hamburg). Long-distance trains between Berlin and Hamburg will be diverted via Stendal and Uelzen and local services replaced by buses. Other connecting lines will also be closed; see the respective ''Land'' heading for details.
Also between 2 August 2025 and 30 April 2026, the Berlin to Pritzwalk line (KBS 206) will be closed between Velten (Mark) or Kremmen and Neuruppin. ''RE6'' services are diverted via Herzberg (Mark) - see "Openings" above;
The Berlin Hbf (tief/low level) to Jüterbog line (KBS 203) will be closed between Berlin Südkreuz and Jüterbog from 24 September to 13 December 2025. Between 24 October and 13 December, the closure will be extended to include the section between Berlin Südkreuz and Berlin Hbf (tief/low level). This closure also affects trains via Blankenfelde (Teltow-Fläming) and Elsterwerda (''RE8S'' and ''IC/EC'' services to/from Dresden, which will be diverted via Berlin Ostkreuz).
The two tracks for regional and long distance trains between Berlin Ostbahnhof and Charlottenburg will be closed from start of traffic 14.06.2026 until end of traffic 12.12.2026; see [https://www.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/bahn-plant-weitere-generalsanierung-berliner-stadtbahn-wird-fur-sechs-monate-gesperrt-14134373.html this press report]. The two ''S-Bahn'' tracks will remain operational.
=====Hessen=====
The line between Frankfurt an Main-Höchst and Bad Soden (Taunus) (KBS 643) is closed from 29 March 2024 until probably 2028 and the ''RB11'' service replaced by buses. This is in connection with construction of the new ''Regionaltangente West'' line, which will link the Bad Homburg and Bad Soden lines via Eschborn.
=====Mecklenburg-Vorpommern=====
The ''Hamburger Bahn'' (Hamburg – Berlin) will be closed between 1 August 2025 and 30 April 2026 between the outskirts of Hamburg and Wustermark. Long-distance Hamburg – Berlin trains are diverted via Uelzen and Stendal, and local trains are replaced by buses. Long-distance trains between Hamburg and Rostock/Stralsund are diverted via Lübeck with no services running between Hagenow Land and Schwerin Süd, Ludwigslust and Parchim or between Ludwigslust and Schwerin Süd.
=====Niedersachsen=====
The line between Ihrhove and Nieuweschans (KBS 397) closed after a ship hit and destroyed the main span of the bridge over the River Ems on 3 December 2015. DB has reconstructed the bridge, and the line is now expected to reopen fully on 14 December 2025. The train service on the German section west of the bridge, between Nieuweschans and Weener, resumed on 30 October 2016. Once the bridge has reopened a direct Bremen – Groningen service is planned, to be known as the "Wunderline".
''ICE'' trains between Berlin and Hamburg are diverted via Stendal and Uelzen between 1 August 2025 and 30 April 2026 owing to work on the direct route via Ludwigslust. This means that westbound trains are expected to use the ''Veerßer Kurve'' at Uelzen (DE25/188).
=====Nordrhein-Westfalen=====
The following lines remain closed after the severe floods of mid-July 2021. Planned reopening dates are as below.
* 475 Euskirchen – Bad Münstereifel (14 December 2025)
* 482 (part) Stolberg (Rheinl) Hbf – Eschweiler West (14 December 2025)
* 482 (part) Stolberg-Rathaus – Stolberg Altstadt (14 June 2026).
The service from Bottrop Hbf to Duisburg-Ruhrort (KBS 447) is closed and replaced by buses for the whole of the 2024-25 timetable period because of staff shortages. This means that there is no service on the lines between Bottrop Hbf and Abzw Oberhausen Obn via Oberhausen-Osterfeld Süd and between Oberhausen Hbf and Duisburg-Ruhrort.
The section of KBS 437 between Unna and Fröndenberg has been closed since December 2022 because at least 140 badger tunnels were found to have undermined the whole line. In June 2025 DB InfraGO [https://www.deutschebahn.com/de/presse/presse-regional/pr-duesseldorf-de/presseinformationen-regional/Froendenberg-Unna-RB-54-Planungen-fuer-Sanierung-des-von-Dachsbauten-beschaedigten-Eisenbahndamms-gehen-in-die-Details--13400400 announced] that work to reinstate the line will start in 2027 and trains will resume in 2028. ''RB54'' services are replaced by buses until then.
The ''Rothaarbahn'' from Erndtebrück to Bad Berleburg (KBS 443) was closed between Aue-Wingeshausen and Bad Berleburg on 18 May 2025 by DB InfraGO because of the dilapidated state of two bridges on the route. Reopening is not foreseen before 2029.
=====Rheinland-Pfalz=====
The ''Zellertalbahn'' between Monsheim, Langmeil (Pfalz) and Münchweiler (Alsenz) (KBS 662.1) has been closed since 2018 because of the condition of the track. The most recent planned start date of 2 August 2025 did not happen. A new start date is not yet known but is likely to be around April 2026 at the earliest.
The western end of the ''Ahrtalbahn'' (KBS 477) between Walporzheim and Ahrbrück remains closed after suffering severe damage in the floods of mid-July 2021. It is being rebuilt and electrified and is due to reopen on 14 December 2025.
DB InfraGO closed the Neustadt (Weinstr) – Bad Dürkheim line (KBS 667) between Deidesheim and Bad Dürkheim from 17 March 2025 because it has been undermined by badger tunnels. Reopening is expected in December 2025 at the earliest.
=====Sachsen-Anhalt=====
The short (2.9 km) branch of the Harzer Schmalspurbahnen system between Alexisbad and Harzgerode is closed from 25 April 2025 until the end of November with passengers to use parallel scheduled buses instead as there will be no rail replacement service provided.
=====Schleswig-Holstein=====
Because of the condition of the ''Lindaunisbrücke'' combined road-rail bascule bridge over the Schlei sea inlet between Rieseby and Süderbrarup on the Kiel to Flensburg line (KBS 146), it was closed to rail traffic on 31 October 2021. Since September 15 2022 the service has terminated at temporary platforms either side of the inlet, known as Rieseby Schleibrücke Süd and Boren-Lindaunis Schleibrücke Nord, with passengers having to walk over a newly-built footbridge between them, a distance of 264 metres. A 126-metre long replacement bascule bridge is to be built, 13 metres to the east of the old bridge. Unfortunately the EBA (Federal Railway Authority) has introduced new, stricter, standards for railway bridges and so DB's plans for the bridge have been delayed and completion is not expected for several years.
=====Museum lines=====
As a result of serious flood damage in June 2024, the ''Schwäbische Waldbahn'' between Rudersberg and Welzheim is suspended. Financing for reconstruction has been secured and museum services are expected to resume in May 2026. Regular passenger services resumed over part of the shared section between Rudersberg and Rudersberg Nord (0.8 km) in May 2025.
The ''Bremen-Thedinghauser Eisenbahn'' (''"Pingelheini"'') service closed once again between Stuhr and Leeste (b. Bremen) after service on 16 June 2024, so that work can actually commence on the long-awaited extension of Bremen tram route no. 8. This section originally closed at the end of the 2015 season to allow work on the tram extension but reopened on 22 August 2021 with no progress on the tramway having been made. It is believed that eventually the ''Pingelheini'' trains will resume as far as Bremen-Kirchhuchting, sharing the track with the trams as far as a junction just short of there.
Services on the museum line between Rinteln and Stadthagen were thought to have ended after a final day of operation on 21 April 2024, because extensive repairs to bridges and track were required. However in March 2025 it was announced that the line has been taken over by the Diepholzer Kreisbahn, principally for goods traffic, but this will also allow the museum service to resume at some point.
The museum line between Bremerhaven-Fischereihafen, Bremerhaven Hbf and Bad Bederkesa last had scheduled services on 17 September 2023. According to [https://www.museumsbahn-bremerhaven-bederkesa.de/seite/433397/fahrtage.html their website]. no services were offered in 2024 and the site has not even been updated for 2025. It is not known when, or even if, services will resume.
The ''Wiehltalbahn'' from Gummersbach-Dieringhausen to Waldbröl was closed in summer 2020 because of fire damage to a bridge over the Wiehl river at Bielstein. It was reopened as far as Wiehl on 26 March 2023; however their [https://wiehltalbahn.de/de/ website] does not show any journeys since August 2023, apart from short draisine runs in Waldbröl in September 2025. In July 2025, the line's owners, Rhein-Sieg Eisenbahn GmbH, announced that they would be putting the line up for transfer to another operator, but if this was not successful, they would be applying to have the line officially closed.
The [https://museumsbahn-losheim.de/ ''Museums-Eisenbahn-Club Losheim''] was closed suddenly in April 2017 by the authorities because of the condition of the track. Following this closure, trains only ran between Großer Wald and Dellborner Mühle and since September 2022 no trains have run at all. In mid-2025, ''Land'' Saarland decided not to proceed with a scheme to reopen the line to regular passenger traffic, following objections from the local authorities on the route. One of the grounds for objection was the effect that the reopening would have on the preservation operation. Ironically in May 2025, the Merzig and Losheim town councils, as infrastructure owners (EIU), also the district council, all voted to close the line completely and probably replace it with a cycle path. However in July 2025, the preservation society MECL with the backing of a local entrepreneur stated that they wished to buy the line. Apparently if a line is put up for formal closure but another bidder wishes to take it on, the line cannot be closed despite the wishes of the current owners, so it may be that the line will be saved at the eleventh hour.


===Older Changes===
===Older Changes===
Line 484: Line 967:
==Special notes==
==Special notes==


DB trains are divided into a number of distinct categories, thus:
Train services in Germany are divided into a number of distinct categories:
* S (S-Bahn): Regular interval local trains in urban areas, generally using segregated tracks  
* ''S'' (''S-Bahn''): Regular interval local trains in urban and suburban areas, often using segregated tracks, particularly in city centres.
* RB (Regionalbahn): Basic local services.  
* ''RB'' (''Regionalbahn''): Basic local services, usually calling at all stations except where a parallel ''S-Bahn'' route exists.  
* RE (RegionalExpress): Regular interval local or semi-fast trains calling at fewer stations than RB services.  
* ''RE'' (''RegionalExpress''): Regular interval local or semi-fast trains calling at fewer stations than ''RB'' services.  
* IRE (Inter-RegionalExpress): Long distance semi-fast trains.  
* ''IRE'' (''Inter-Regional Express''): Long-distance semi-fast trains. This designation is now only used for the infrequent ''Kulturzug'' services between Berlin and Wrocław; it ceased being used in Baden-Württemberg at the December 2024 timetable change when the remaining ''IRE'' services there became standard ''RE''.
* IC (InterCity): Long distance expresses, making limited stops.  
* ''IC'' (''InterCity''): Long-distance expresses, making limited stops. 'Traditional' loco-hauled ''IC'' trains are now rare with many former ''IC'' services having been converted to ''ICE'' operation and many of those that remain being operated with double-deck ''IC2'' rolling stock.
* EC (EuroCity): Similar to IC, but for international journeys.  
* ''EC'' (''EuroCity''): Similar to ''IC'', but for international journeys, often using non-German rolling stock.  
* RJ (Railjet): High speed Austrian Railways trains on the München – Wien - Budapest route.  
* ''RJ'' / ''RJX'' (''Railjet'' / ''Railjet Xpress''): High-speed Austrian Railways (ÖBB) trains, mainly to and from München via Salzburg.
* ICE (InterCity Express) & ICE Sprinter: High speed, long distance electric trains worked with special rolling stock. Special fares are payable on these trains, and if purchasing a ticket for a route on which ICE trains, operate it is important to specify which type of train it is intended to use. It is usually possible to make a slower but cheaper journey by IC or RE service.  
* ''ICE'' (''InterCity Express'') & ''ICE Sprinter'': High-speed, long-distance electric trains worked with dedicated ''ICE'' trainsets. These are the only trains to operate on certain stretches of high-speed line (''Schnellfahrstrecken'') such as between Frankfurt (Main) and Köln and between Hannover and Würzburg.
* THA (Thalys): High speed trains on the Köln - Brussels - Paris route, managed by the French and Belgian railways.  
* ''ECE'' (''EuroCity Express''): Trains between München and Zürich are designated ''ECE'' and are operated by Swiss Railways (SBB) high-speed trainsets.
* ICN (InterCityNight) and CNL (CityNightLine): Categories of overnight train.  
* ''EST'' (''Eurostar''): High-speed trains on the Köln Brussels Paris route, managed by the French and Belgian railways, rebranded from ''Thalys'' in October 2023. Not to be confused with the Paris/Brussels – London services through the Channel Tunnel, although they have been part of the same group since 2021.
* D-Zug: This designation is derived from Durchgang, the German for corridor. Appropriate trains were designated D-Züge when corridor coaches were first introduced, and the term remained in use until largely replaced by IC and IR. It is now hardly used by DB.
* ''NJ'' (''Nightjet''): Almost all of the remaining sleeper trains to and from Germany are operated by ÖBB (Austrian Railways) and branded as "Nightjet", the exceptions being non-ÖBB operated services such as those to Stockholm (operated by SJ) or Zagreb (operated by HZ) which retain the designation ''EN'' (''EuroNight'').
* ''D-Zug'': This designation is derived from ''Durchgang'', the German for corridor. Its use for regular passenger trains is now very rare — the only remaining instances in Germany are on the Snälltåget-operated Berlin – Malmö – Stockholm overnight services. It may still be used for an excursion or other special passenger train.
A few services operate only during school term time, or are extensively altered during school holidays. The dates of holidays varies from ''Land'' to ''Land''.


Train running can be observed on [http://www.zugfinder.de/ Zugfinder] which displays the position of trains along each line.
A few services operate only during school term time, or are extensively altered during school holidays. The dates of holidays vary from ''Land'' to ''Land''.


A brief Guide to [[Germany - Railway Terminology|German railway terminology]] is available.
A brief Guide to [[Germany - Railway Terminology|German railway terminology]] is available.
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==See also==
==See also==
{{Navbox Germany}}
{{Navbox Germany}}
[[Category:General Information]]

Latest revision as of 13:24, 26 September 2025

Country Name

Germany (Deutschland)

National Railway System

Deutsche Bahn AG (DB).

National Railway Operator

Deutsche Bahn AG (DBAG) is a company wholly owned by the German government. It functions through a large number of subsidiary companies. The principal ones responsible for railway operations in Germany are:

  • DB Fernverkehr AG: Long-distance (IC/ICE) passenger services, also operation of EC and most other international services within Germany.
  • DB Regio AG: Local and regional passenger services. DB Regio is split into regional divisions and also owns various subsidiary rail and bus passenger companies, almost all of which bear DB branding.
  • DB Vertrieb GmbH: Retail sales and systems
  • DB Cargo Deutschland AG: Freight services
  • DB InfraGO AG: Infrastructure (since 27 December 2023 when it was formed by a merger or the former DB Netz and DB Station&Service entities)
  • DB Fahrzeuginstandhaltung GmbH: Maintenance

DBAG has many interests in other countries, although it sold its Arriva subsidiary which operated passenger rail and bus services outside Germany to a private equity firm for an undisclosed sum in June 2024.

Subsidiaries of DB Cargo AG in Germany include RBH Logistics GmbH and an 80% holding in Mitteldeutsche Eisenbahn (MEG). Outside Germany it has 100%-owned subsidiaries in several European countries under the DB Cargo name, and part-ownership of several railfreight firms such as Transfesa.

Other Operators

Long-distance services

There has been only limited success with open-access long-distance passenger services in competition with DB. The following operators run trains within Germany or to neighbouring countries:

  • Flixtrain, a subsidiary of German long-distance coach operator Flixbus, runs various long-distance trains within Germany. PDF timetables and a route map are available here. Note that both flixtrain.com and flixtrain.de redirect to the Flixbus site so this link must be used. There are generally one or two trains each way on certain days only on each route. Timetables change frequently. Other than the core Stuttgart to Berlin and Hamburg to Köln services, routes and stations served are also subject to frequent changes, additions and withdrawals.
  • Abellio Rail Mitteldeutschland runs the Harz-Berlin Express on summer weekends only between Berlin and Goslar/Thale Hbf, having taken over from Transdev in 2018.
  • Snälltåget (a subsidiary of Transdev) operates overnight trains between Berlin, Malmö and Stockholm for most of the year.
  • RDC Deutschland subsidiary BahnTouristikExpress operates a Hamburg-Lörrach overnight car-carrying service in the summer months, marketed as BTE AutoReiseZug, and the seasonal weekend-only Alpen-Sylt Nachtexpress overnight service between Salzburg and Westerland (Sylt). RDC subsidiary RDC Autozug Sylt GmbH operates a car-carrying service between Niebüll and Westerland (Sylt) in competition with DB.
  • Urlaubs-Express operates Motorail services in the winter from various cities in northern Germany to München and ski resorts in Austria, and in the summer to München, Lörrach, Innsbruck and Verona. Passengers without cars are also carried.
  • Eurostar (re-branded from Thalys in 2024) operates high-speed services between Paris, Brussel/Bruxelles and Köln, with occasional services extended to the Ruhr. This is a division of Eurostar Group which also operates passenger services through the Channel Tunnel and is mainly owned by the French and Belgian national railways SNCF and SNCB/NMBS.
  • WESTbahn (WESTbahn Management GmbH): The first open access operator in Austria, WESTbahn runs trains from Wien Westbahnhof into Germany on the Salzburg Hbf – München Hbf route. From 15 December 2024, one train pair has been extended from München Hbf to Stuttgart.

Local services

Local and regional services are tendered by regions (Länder) in lots comprising a particular area or network, usually for a period of between two and twelve years. As a result, over the years an increasing number of services have become operated by companies other than DB Regio, to the extent that DB Regio-operated trains are a rarity in quite a few areas.

These non-DB companies are often owned by the Land concerned (for example HLB in Hessen and SWEG in Baden-Württemberg), or by the state railways of other countries including the Netherlands (Abellio), Austria (Arverio) or Italy (various brands within the Netinera group), or they can be completely private companies, often foreign (for example National Express (UK) or Transdev (France)).

Language

German.

Upper and Lower Sorbian are Slavic languages spoken in the areas around Bautzen and Cottbus respectively. They appear alongside German on station nameboards in these areas.

North Frisian is a minority language spoken in the north-west of Schleswig-Holstein. Station nameboards in this area are also bilingual.

Currency

Euro

UIC codes

  • Deutsche Bahn AG: numeric 80, alpha DB.

Other companies operating on DB InfraGO AG (formerly DB Netz) tracks in Germany also use numeric code 80 but each has its own individual alpha code.

The former Deutsche Reichsbahn code was 50, but this will now be seen only on withdrawn or museum vehicles.

Timetable

Journey Planner

Actual Train Times

  • Zugverfolgung.com Note that this site seems to offer tracking for Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands and Switzerland as well.
  • The DB-operated bahnhof.de site offers live departure and arrival information for all stations in Germany.
  • BahnExpert and DBF are two unofficial sites offering live departure and arrival information.

Downloadable Timetable

http://kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe

If the table number is known, it can simply be inserted in the Kursbuchstreckennummer search box at top left.

Otherwise, use one of the buttons in the left-hand column:

  • "Kursbuchtabellensuche". This button gives options to search by:
    • Bahnhof/Halt (Station/Halt)
    • Liniennummer (Line Number. Note this is not the table number, but the S-Bahn or RB/RE line number. These are duplicated across Germany, so a search for (e.g.) S2 or RB40 will produce results from many different areas, from which one can pick the desired route)
    • Kursbuchstreckennummer (Table number)
    • Zugnummer (Train number e.g. IC1234)
  • "Interaktive Streckenkarte". This button produces a passenger network map. Scroll to the desired area, click on the table number next to a line and that line's timetable will be displayed.
  • "Tabellenübersichten". This button produces further options, including:
    • Regionaltabellen (In spite of its name, an almost-complete table list - but see note on omitted tables below)
    • Museums- und Nostalgiebahnen (Preserved railways - only a very few shown)

The Schifffahrtstabellen (shipping services) and Bergbahnen (mountain railways) buttons do not link to any tables.

Unfortunately, quite a few timetables no longer appear in the electronic Kursbuch. These are listed in the 'Lines with Obscure or Sparse Passenger Services' section under 'Regular Services Not in the Kursbuch '.

While IC/EC and ICE services appear in many tables alongside regional services, there are many routes where long-distance services operate but only regional services are shown in the tables. For full timetables of long-distance services, the European Rail Timetable is recommended.

The bahnhof.de site shows pdf copies of the printed station departure sheets for almost all stations in Germany, both for the regular timetable and for any alterations. Exceptions are stations on a few branch lines where the infrastructure is not owned or managed by DB InfraGO. Note that if the initial search returns an error message, selecting "Bahnhof wählen" and then searching often works.

Printed Timetable

DB has not provided a hard-copy national timetable since 2007-08. A local book for the 2025 timetable in Nordrhein-Westfalen is available to order from the VRS website. Baden-Württemberg and Schleswig-Holstein also still publish timetable books for services in their areas.

Engineering Information

Engineering work information in German only.

A DB engineering works app (DB Bauarbeiten) is available in both Android and iPhone versions but only in German.

The APKPure DB Bauarbeiten app gives a number of options.

Bus Information

The Journey Planner (above) selects bus services if they provide the best journey.

Maps

Printed Maps

Web-based Maps

Ticketing

Deutschland-Ticket

This ticket (D-Ticket for short) is a season ticket for almost all urban, local and regional transport across Germany, priced at only €58 per calendar month. It is sold on a subscription basis and in digital format only. The price is due to increase to €63 per month in January 2026.

Tickets are not valid as a rule on long-distance services (IC/EC or ICE), but there are certain exceptions as shown in the validity conditions, for example west of Bremen inclusive. Note however that the long-standing acceptance of local tickets (including the D-Ticket) on IC services in the Berlin/Brandenburg area will cease in December 2025. D-Tickets are valid on most of the narrow-gauge steam railways in eastern Germany that operate regular scheduled services, usually on payment of a supplement.

A summary of the validity conditions is on the DB site in English here. Full validity details are on a pdf which is linked to from the DB German-language site here under In welchen Zügen gilt das Deutschland-Ticket? then under Geltungsbereich Deutschland-Ticket.

Normally a German or Eurozone-based bank account is required to set up a direct debit for the subscription; however a few possibilities for international purchasers are known, such as the Hamburg transport authority's "HVV Switch" app where UK customers can use PayPal, or "MoPla Solutions" which allows payment by UK credit card.

For occasional visits to Germany, the following offers may be more suitable.

Rover tickets

There are two main versions, the Quer-durchs-Land Ticket which covers the whole of Germany, and Länder-Tickets which cover each individual region (Land) of the country.

All these tickets are valid from 09:00 on Mondays to Fridays, and from midnight at weekends and on public holidays, until 03:00 on the morning following the day of validity and are only valid on local train services (RE, RB and S-Bahn) whether operated by DB or any of the many non-DB operators. Tickets are not generally valid on IC/EC or ICE services, but there are a few exceptions, notably west of Bremen. Note however that acceptance of local tickets on IC services in the Berlin/Brandenburg area will end in December 2025. Museum-type lines are generally excluded apart from the few that accept local public transport tickets.

The main difference between the two types of ticket, apart from the areas of validity, is that the Quer-durchs-Land Ticket is not valid on local urban transport (buses, trams and U-Bahn services) whereas Länder-Tickets almost always are (the exception being the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Ticket which is not valid on urban transport except in Hamburg).

The Quer-durchs-Land Ticket and most Länder-Tickets are valid for between one and five people, with a base fare being charged for the first person and a small additional amount added for each additional traveller. The number of passengers must be specified at the time of purchase and all their names written on the ticket. Exceptions are the Hessen-Ticket which has a flat fare for up to five people, and the Schöner-Tag-Ticket NRW which only comes in versions for single or between two and five travellers.

Some Länder-Tickets are valid in more than one Land; in particular Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt and Thüringen count as the one area, and a ticket for any one of these Länder is valid in all three. Rheinland-Pfalz and Saarland also count as the one area, and the Schleswig-Holstein-Ticket is valid in Hamburg and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, although the cheaper Mecklenburg-Vorpommern-Ticket is valid in Hamburg but not in Schleswig-Holstein. Often tickets are valid a short distance into other Länder or even other countries.

There are numerous options only available in certain Länder including all-day, evening-only, youth and First Class versions.

Extensions to Länder-Tickets to other countries are available such as the Niedersachsen-Ticket to Groningen (NL), the Saarland-Ticket to Lorraine (FR) and Luxembourg (the Saar-Lor-Lux Ticket) and the Sachsen- or Bayern- Tickets to Bohemia (Böhmen) (CZ). Note that when these add-ons are purchased, the validity in Germany is only within the Land stated (e.g. Sachsen).

Validity details for each of these tickets can be checked on the DB website's regional offers page (in German - the English-language pages no longer give this information).

Tariff association (Verkehrsverbund) tickets are also available in most regions of Germany. These can cover just the area round a town, or an entire region such as Berlin and Brandenburg. They normally offer day tickets for various zonal combinations which may be better value than a Länder-Ticket, or have no weekday start time restriction. Zones can be simple London-style concentric rings, as in München, or a complicated system of adjacent hexagons, as in the Frankfurt am Main area. Careful study of the various tariff options is recommended.

Point-to-point tickets

As with most European railways, dearer flexible and cheaper train-specific tickets are available.

Flexible tickets are known as Flexpreis on long-distance (ICE or IC/EC) trains and as Normalpreis on local trains when priced by DB. They can be used on any train of the specified type on any permitted route between origin and destination. Break of journey is allowed. Tickets for ICE trains are dearer than those for IC/EC or purely local services. A Flexpreis ticket for a dearer train type can be used on cheaper train types if desired.

Notes:

1. Flexpreis tickets are no longer available from on-board staff. If you board an ICE or IC/EC train without a ticket, you must buy a ticket on the DB website or app within 10 minutes of departing from your boarding station or be liable for a considerable surcharge.
2. Normalpreis tickets cannot be upgraded to be used on long-distance services except where there is disruption, when they may exceptionally be allowed to be used without extra payment.

Local tickets entirely within city or Land tariff areas have different pricing structures and conditions. Often these tickets are zonal and time-limited, and valid on other local transport, but they may well be non-refundable and have no break of journey facility.

Advance tickets, known as Sparpreis and Super Sparpreis, are available on any journey with at least one leg on a long-distance service. They are only valid on the booked long-distance train. Cheaper tickets are available to under-27s and over-65s.

Full details of all DB tickets are on the DB website ticketing page.

BahnCards

BahnCards are annual discount railcards, sold on a subscription basis, which give either a 25% or 50% discount and in either First or Second Class versions. Cheaper Youth and Senior Cards are available, as are trial and occasional promotional versions. There is also a BahnCard100 which gives one year's unlimited travel on almost all public transport throughout Germany.

Full details are available on the DB website.

Flixtrain tickets

Flixtrain tickets must be booked from the Flixbus website or a Flixbus office, which can be found at major bus stations. DB tickets and Interrail/Eurail passes are not valid on Flixtrain services.

Infrastructure

Infrastructure Authority

DB InfraGO AG, a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn AG, is responsible for track and infrastructure. It replaced DB Netz AG on 27 December 2023, when it was created by a merger of the DB Netz AG and DB Station&Service organisations.

The Eisenbahn-Bundesamt (EBA) is a government agency tasked with regulatory oversight of safety and some other matters, independent of DB.

Network Statement

DB InfraGO AG > Network Statement 2025

Gauge

Standard.

There are various narrow-gauge non-DB lines, including former DB/DR operated ones in the Harz (1000 mm gauge) and at Bad Doberan ("Molli") (900 mm) and, all 750 mm, on the island of Rügen ("Rasender Roland"), at Oschatz (Döllnitzbahn/"Wilder Robert"), Radebeul (Lößnitzgrundbahn), Freital (Weißeritztalbahn), Cranzahl (Fichtelbergbahn), and Zittau (Zittauer Schmalspurbahn).

DB operates a metre gauge line on the island of Wangerooge. A number of tramway systems are metre gauge.

The train ferry terminal at Sassnitz Fährhafen (Mukran) has 1524 mm gauge tracks to receive and despatch wagons from and to Klaipeda, in addition to the standard gauge tracks.

The funicular section Obstfelderschmiede - Lichtenhain is 1800 mm gauge.

Electrification

15 kV 16.7 Hz ac.

The Berlin S-Bahn is 800V dc third rail, and the Hamburg S-Bahn is 1200V dc third rail. Obstfelderschmiede to Cursdorf is 500V dc overhead and Blankenburg (Harz) to Elbingerode and Kalkwerk Homberg, which has been freight-only since 2005, is 25kV 50Hz ac. (The line between Kalkwerk Homberg and Königshütte closed to all traffic in 2000 and is now lifted).

The following cross-border lines have sections within Germany that use the other country's electrification system. Distances shown are the sections within Germany between the frontier and the electrification changeover point:

Hengelo (NL) - Bad Bentheim: 8.1 km at 1500 V dc
Arnhem/Betuweroute (NL) - Emmerich: 5.6 km at 25 kV ac (see Note below)
Welkenraedt/LGV (BE) - Aachen Hbf: 7.4 km at 3 kV dc
Węgliniec (PL) - Horka: 1.5 km at 3 kV dc
Rzepin (PL) - Frankfurt (Oder): 1.7 km at 3 kV dc.
It is planned to electrify the few hundred metres from the Polish border viaduct at Zgorzelec into Görlitz Hbf at 3 kV dc.

Note: The line between Emmerich and the Netherlands border was 1500 V dc but has been converted to 25 kV ac for easier operation of Betuweroute freight traffic. This means that trains between Emmerich and Arnhem must be able to operate under three different electrification systems.

Rule of the road

Right.

A few sections of line have left-hand running, as follows:

  • a short piece of the Aachen – Liège main line between the east end of the Busch Tunnel (Üst Aachen Süd) and the Belgian border;
  • between Nürnberg-Reichelsdorf and Nürnberg Hbf, on the non-S-Bahn lines only, to facilitate reversal by trains running between the Treuchtlingen and Würzburg lines;
  • on the Hamburg S-Bahn between Altona and Holstenstraße, to assist reversal.

Distances

The Schweers + Wall Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (11th Edn. ISBN 978-3-89494-149-9) is the best source of distance information.

Other Railways

See separate document.

Tourist lines

Very few tourist lines run frequently - once or twice a month during the summer is quite common, although some operate only two or three times a year. In many cases these are weekend operations over private freight lines. Whilst many tourist trains are steam-worked, numerous preserved railbuses and diesel locomotives are also used. A German language site Eisenbahn Vereinskarte Deutschland comprises an interactive map of Germany showing most preserved railways. An English language site gives an overview map split by Länder, with a list of many lines in alphabetical order in each Land section. Both give direct links to the various railways' homepages/timetables. The DB Kursbuch site gives timetables for a very small number of preserved lines in its Museums- und Nostalgiebahnen section.

Timetables and other information about tourist lines are published annually in Kursbuch der deutschen Museums-Eisenbahnen (published by Eisenbahn Kurier, EK-Verlag GmbH, Lörracher Str. 16, 79115 Freiburg, tel +49 761 703100). Owing to the very large number of tourist lines in Germany, no one source appears to give a comprehensive list of every operation, so it is suggested that each of the above sources is consulted.

A special category are Parkeisenbahnen, which are complex miniature railways where operations closely follow the prototype. A comprehensive list of these is given in Wikipedia.

Rail cycling (Draisinenfahrten) is possible on a number of lines; see the IG Draisinenfahrten website for details of a few of them.

Metro

Berlin, Hamburg, München, Nürnberg. A number of other cities have partially underground or interurban tram networks, known as U-Bahn or Stadtbahn, including Bielefeld, Bochum, Bonn, Dortmund, Düsseldorf, Duisburg, Essen, Frankfurt am Main, Gelsenkirchen, Hannover, Köln, Ludwigshafen, Mannheim, Mülheim (Ruhr) and Stuttgart.

Track plans for all metro and tram systems in Germany are available on the Gleisplanweb site.

Trams/LRT-Systems

Augsburg, Bad Schandau, Berlin, Bielefeld, Bochum, Bonn, Brandenburg, Braunschweig, Bremen, Chemnitz, Cottbus, Darmstadt, Dessau, Dortmund, Dresden, Düsseldorf, Duisburg, Erfurt, Essen, Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt an der Oder, Freiburg (Breisgau), Gelsenkirchen, Gera, Görlitz, Gotha, Halberstadt, Halle (Saale), Hannover, Heidelberg, Heilbronn, Jena, Karlsruhe, Kassel, Köln, Krefeld, Leipzig, Ludwigshafen, Magdeburg, Mainz, Mannheim, Mülheim (Ruhr), München, Naumburg (Saale), Nordhausen, Nürnberg, Oberhausen, Plauen, Potsdam, Rostock, Rüdersdorf, Saarbrücken, Schwerin, Strausberg, Stuttgart, Ulm, Woltersdorf, Würzburg, Zwickau. Many neighbouring systems are interlinked. It is possible to travel entirely by tram, changing cars and gauge several times, all the way from Benrath (south of Düsseldorf) to Witten (east of Bochum). This is reputed to be the longest possible journey by tram anywhere in the world.

Some of the above networks are "Tram-Train" systems with certain vehicles that can run on both the urban tram network and the suburban rail network, including Chemnitz, Karlsruhe/Heilbronn, Kassel and Saarbrücken. In Zwickau, heavy-rail diesel railcars share a short section of mixed-gauge (1435/1000 mm) track with the city tramway system and run under tramway regulations, but there is no further connection with the tram network because of the different gauges

Track plans for all tram systems in Germany are available on the Gleisplanweb site or on the UrbanRail site.

See also Germany - Tram services over obscure routes

Recent and Future Changes

General

The funding of local public transport, including railways, is controlled by the Länder (regions) and in some areas responsibility has been devolved to the Kreise (districts). Western Länder are generally supportive of rail and many lines have been re-opened in the last couple of decades. However in the eastern Länder many lines have been closed as a result of depopulation and increasing car ownership since reunification, and lack of funds to support such a dense network of local services.

The rate of closures has slowed considerably in recent years, and the federal government is making funds available to the Länder for re-opening schemes. While there have been numerous lengthy lists published of closed lines which are possible candidates for re-opening, only those proposals which are likely to be progressed with are mentioned below.

Recent Changes

Openings

2025

The following line opened on 22 September 2025

200.2 Blankenfelde (Kr Teltow-Fläming) former S-Bahn platform – main station Extension of S2 to terminate in the main station

The following lines opened on 1/2 August 2025

206 Neuruppin Rheinsberger Tor – Herzberg (Mark) Reopened temporarily until 30 April 2026 for diverted RE6 services because of engineering work between Neuruppin and Kremmen
202 Dallgow-Döberitz – Wustermark Awf [– Hennigsdorf] Reopened temporarily until 30 April 2026 for diverted RE2 services because of engineering work between Berlin-Spandau and Brieselang

The following line opened on 1 July 2025

459 Marienheide – Lüdenscheid-Brügge Reopened after the severe floods of 14 July 2021

The following line opened on 16 June 2025

474 Gerolstein – Kall Reopened after the severe floods of 14 July 2021. However no through Köln – Trier services until at least October 2025 because of electrification and resignalling work with replacement buses operating between Gerolstein and Bitburg-Erdorf or Trier Hbf until then.

The following line opened on 14 April 2025

790.21 Schorndorf – Rudersberg Reopened after severe flood damage closed the line on 3 June 2024. A further 0.8 km section to Rudersberg Nord was reopened by the end of May 2025. The final 0.8 km section of regular passenger line to Rudersberg-Oberndorf remains closed until further notice.

The following lines opened on 3 March 2025

693.1 Trier Hafenstraße – Trier West – Abzw Karthaus Nordwest [– Igel] New Wittlich – Luxembourg service (SuX) over the reopened Trierer Weststrecke. Trier Hafenstraße is a new station around 1 km south of Ehrang station, which has closed to passengers.
693.2 [Trier-Zewen –] Abzw Karthaus Nordwest – Karthaus Moselbrücke – Konz New Trier Hafenstraße – Saarburg service over the Trierer Weststrecke and these two curves

The following line opened on 10 February 2025

703 (Mulhouse Ville (France)) – Neuenburg (Baden) Grenze – Müllheim in Markgräflerland Reopened after having been suspended since August 2023 owing to availability problems with stock and bilingual crew

The following line opened on 3 February 2025

372 Hameln – Elze (Han) Reopened after having been closed since October 2023 for bridge repairs and resignalling works

In the "tourist/museum line" sector:

The section of the Rahden – Uchte museum line between Rahden and a temporary platform 200 m short of Lavelsloh station reopened on 29 May 2025. The whole line had been closed since June 2021 because of the condition of the track. It is intended to reopen further sections towards Uchte in due course, with eventually the full line being reopened.

A c. 13 km section of the Muldentalbahn between a temporary platform at Glauchau (Sachs) Reinholdshain and Wolkenburg was reopened for tourist services with the first day of service being 29 May 2025. It is not yet known how regular the days of operation will be.

A new c. 1 km-long branch of the metre-gauge horse tramway on the island of Spiekeroog opened on 6 May 2025, from a junction (Abzw Westend) shortly before the existing Westend terminus to a terminus known as Lütjeoogdünen. When new sea defences are built on the island, the existing Westend branch will be closed and all services will run to and from Lütjeoogdünen.

2024

The following line opened on 14 December 2024

912 Gunzenhausen – Wassertrüdingen Extension of existing RB62 Pleinfeld – Gunzenhausen service

The following line opened on 29 July 2024

209.26 Küstrin-Kietz – Kostrzyn (PL) Reopened after being closed since December 2020 for replacement of the Oderbrücke

The following service officially opened on 27 June 2024, with public service from 29 June 2024.

482 Aachen - Maastricht (NL) - Liège (BE) Finally opened, through to Liège, after 6 years of delay due to technical challenges e.g. ETCS and even storm damage.

The following line opened on 17 April 2024

434 Rummenohl – Lüdenscheid-Brügge – Lüdenscheid Reopened after July 2021 flood damage

The following line opened on 8 April 2024

459 Gummersbach – Marienheide Reopened after July 2021 flood damage

The following line opened on 7 January 2024

428 Recklinghausen Süd – Herne-Rottbruch [– Bochum-Riemke] New RE41 service direct from Recklinghausen Hbf to Bochum Hbf
2023

The following lines opened on 4 September 2023

RB TES Erkner – Fangschleuse Tesla Süd Shuttle service on Mondays to Fridays to serve Tesla electric car factory
RB TES Biesdorfer Kreuz West – Biesdorfer Kreuz Süd West – Biesdorfer Kreuz Süd Used by one early morning service from Berlin-Lichtenberg to Fangschleuse Tesla Süd and one late evening return on weekdays only
RB TES Biesdorfer Kreuz Süd – Eichgestell Nord (Außenring) Used by one early morning service from Berlin-Lichtenberg to Fangschleuse Tesla Süd and one late evening return on weekdays only
RB TES Eichgestell Nord – Berlin Stadtforst Used by one early morning service from Berlin-Lichtenberg to Fangschleuse Tesla Süd and one late evening return on weekdays only

The following line opened on 11 June 2023

236 Varnsdorf Pivovar Kocour (CZ) – Seifhennersdorf Rail service reinstated after 8-year 'temporary closure'
2022

The following lines opened on 11 December 2022

209 Genshagener Heide Ost – Abzw Birkengrund Süd Used by extended FEX/RB32 services to Ludwigsfelde
209.32 Nord Grünauer Kreuz West – Grünauer Kreuz Süd Used by RB24 and new RB32 to BER T5 (note RB32 operates in two separate sections)
209.33 Lienewitz Lia – Beelitz Bea Reinstated bridge over the Berlin – Bad Belzig line
690 Koblenz-Mosel Gbf – Koblenz Lützel (Koblenz avoiding curve) Used by one RB12 Trier – Köln train pair daily as a replacement for direct services via Gerolstein, so possibly not beyond December 2025
750.1 Ulm Hbf – Wendlingen Rübholz – Wendlingen Abzw W64 (NBS) New high-speed line, initially with connecting curve to Wendlingen (Neckar)

The following line opened on 1 November 2022

351 Einbeck Mitte – Einbeck BBS/PS-Speicher Sparse weekday-only service over this section, experimental for three years

The following line opened on 24 June 2022

393 Sande – Abzw Weißer Floh [– Schortens-Heidmühle] Brand new alignment well to the east of previous one

The following line opened on 12 June 2022

333 (PKP) Guben – Guben Grenze [– Gubin (PL)] Initially weekend-only service; daily from December 2022

The following line opened on 21 May 2022

190 Sassnitz-Mukran Abzw Borchtitz – Sassnitz-Mukran Fährhafen Limited summer service to connect with Ystad and Bornholm ferries

The following line opened on 29 January 2022

524 Chemnitz Technopark – Chemnitz-Reichenhain (Abzw Chemnitz Süd Straßenbahn) New tram-train connection onto reconstructed Chemnitz – Aue line

In the "tourist/museum line" sector:

The Museums-Eisenbahn Minden resumed operation over the long-closed section between Preußisch Oldendorf and Bad Holzhausen on their line to Bohmte on 26 May 2022.

2021

The following lines opened on 20 December 2021

440 Hagen-Kabel – Hagen-Vorhalle Curve between Siegen and Witten lines used by new IC34 services to/from Dortmund
440 Hagen-Kabel – Westhofen (Westf) Curve between Siegen and Unna lines used by new IC34 services to/from Hamm

The following lines opened on 12 December 2021

209.35 Bad Saarow Klinikum – Bad Saarow-Pieskow
Augsburg Tramway Haunstetten West – Königsbrunn Zentrum Line 3, southern extension
Stuttgart LRT Fasanenhof Schelmenwasen – Flughafen/Messe Ost Line U6, south-eastern extension

The following line opened on 11 December 2021

Karlsruhe LRT Kombilösung cross-city tram tunnels Lines 1, 2 and S2 diverted into the tunnel on 11 December followed by AVG lines S1/11, S4, S5/51, S7 and S8 on 12 December

The following line opened on 29 November 2021

627, 646 Frankfurt am Main Hbf – Abzw Mainzer Landstraße New exit line to the north of Frankfurt Außenbahnhof

The following line opened on 8 August 2021

732 Sauldorf – Stockach Summer Sundays only. Reopening delayed by flood damage

The following line opened on 18 July 2021

732 Mengen – Sauldorf Summer Sundays only

Permanent Closures

Note that in most cases the lines remain available for empty stock, freight, diversionary or charter services.

2025

The following lines closed on 23 September 2025

former 203, 240 Großbeeren Süd – Genshagener Heide Mitte Berlin – Elsterwerda/Dresden RE and IC/EC services diverted via Schönefeld owing to engineering work; when these diversions cease on 14 December 2025 they will run via the reinstated Dresdner Bahn
former 203, 240 Glasower Damm West – Glasower Damm Süd as above
2024

The following line closed on 19 October 2024

440 Hagen-Kabel – Abzw Hohensyburg [– Westhofen (Westf.)] The two IC services each way over this curve diverted to run via Dortmund

In the "tourist/museum line" sector:

Scheduled services on the Wisentatalbahn museum line between Schönberg (Vogtl) and Schleiz West ceased after farewell trips on 9 and 10 March 2024, and after a very last farewell excursion on 13 March from Zittau, the line was closed to all traffic. This is because the line's leaseholders Deutsche Regionaleisenbahn GmbH (DRE) wished to terminate the lease and no other undertaking offered to take it on.

2023

The following line closed on 7 August 2023

Ruhrbahn Tram route 104 (part) Mülheim (Ruhr) Wertgasse – Oppspring Also depot journeys from Berliner Platz to Wertgasse

The following line closed on 15 April 2023

415.2 Dortmund Signal Iduna-Park (Westfalenhalle) – Dortmund-Lütgendortmund Flm – Bochum-Langendreer RE11 services reverted to running via Dortmund Hbf and Hamm

In the "tourist/museum line" sector:

In June 2025 it was announced that the 'temporary' closure of the 2.8 km-long section of the Kleinbahn Verden – Walsrode between Neddenaverbergen and Stemmen would be made permanent as a result of track repairs being required at a cost of 3 million Euros, which neither the preservation association nor the local authority can afford to pay. The last trains over this section ran in 2023. Some local politicians are even talking about converting the entire line to a cycle path.

2022

The following lines closed on 11 December 2022

209.23 Abzw Lienewitz Lia – Seddin Bla Replaced by new RB33 Potsdam – Jüterbog service
209.63 Joachimsthal – Templin Stadt Experimental service reinstatement ended

The following line closed on 31 August 2022

140 Neustadt (Holst.) Gbf – Puttgarden
(including the curves to Fehmarn-Burg)
Closed for complete reconstruction, mainly on a new alignment, in connection with the Fehmarn Belt Tunnel project

The following line closed on 27 March 2022

393 Sande - Abzw Weißer Floh [- Schortens-Heidmühle] Replaced by new double-track alignment to the east
2021

In the "tourist/museum line" sector:

The Oleftalbahn between Kall and Hellenthal sustained severe damage over 90% of its length in the devastating floods of 14/15 July 2021. On 7 June 2024 the line's owners Rhein-Sieg-Eisenbahn GmbH announced their intention to close it officially to all traffic. It therefore appears that the line saw its last train in 2021, unless a proposal to reinstate regular passenger services comes to fruition, which seems unlikely.

Future Changes

Forthcoming Openings

2025

The main line tracks (closed 1952) alongside the S-Bahn on the Dresdner Bahn from Berlin Südkreuz to Blankenfelde (Kr. Teltow-Fläming) have been reinstated. Services on the new line will commence on 14 December 2025. The new line will speed up trains between Berlin and Elsterwerda and Dresden and also allow a fast service to Berlin-Brandenburg airport via a brand-new curve (the Mahlower Kurve) between Glasower Damm Nord and Glasower Damm Ost. The reopening of the Dresdner Bahn will mean the end of regular passenger services over the curves from Genshagener Heide Mitte to Großbeeren Süd and from Glasower Damm West to Glasower Damm Süd.

The reopening to regular services of the Kiel to Schönberger Strand branch, which is currently only a tourist line beyond Kiel-Oppendorf, has been heavily and repeatedly delayed. The line is now due to open in three stages: as far as Schönkirchen in December 2025, to Probsteierhagen in Dec. 2026 and finally to Schönberger Strand in December 2027.

The reopening of Calw - Weil der Stadt has been put back by at least one year every year since 2018. It has apparently now been confirmed as 'definitely opening' in December 2025, some seven years after originally planned. Reasons for the delays include legal action, which has been dismissed, and the decision to build a new section of line in tunnel to shorten the route between Ostelsheim and Weil der Stadt. The line will be known as the Hermann-Hesse-Bahn and run through to Renningen, sharing tracks with the S6 from Weil der Stadt.

2026

The Bentheimer Eisenbahn from Bad Bentheim to Coevorden (NL), which was reopened in 2019 as far as Neuenhaus, is planned to be reopened through to Coevorden (NL) on 13 December 2026.

Reopening to passengers of the WLE Münster (Westf) Hbf to Neubeckum line as far as Sendenhorst is now planned for December 2026.

A temporary weekend- and holiday-only passenger service ran in summer 2020 from Duisburg and Moers to Kamp-Lintfort Süd in connection with a garden festival, thus reintroducing trains to the former colliery branch from Rheinkamp. Full passenger services are planned for 2026, via a new south to west curve at Rheinkamp. The branch will be extended to a new Kamp-Lintfort station, beyond the former mine area.

The new high-speed line (NBS) between Ulm and Stuttgart opened on 11 December 2022 between Ulm and Wendlingen. The remaining section between Wendlingen and Stuttgart Hbf is not now due to open until December 2026.

The first stage of the Berlin S-Bahn line linking the Innenring with Berlin Hbf (Invalidenstraße) by an east to south curve from Wedding has been severely delayed and is not now due to open until "spring 2026". The line failed its acceptance test due to insufficient power supply and it was announced in June 2025 that this would have to be replaced. It will initially run between Hauptbahnhof and Gesundbrunnen only, under the designation S15. The intermediate station at Perleberger Brücke is not due to open until 2029. A west to south curve from Westhafen to Invalidenstraße is expected to open later, and plans are to extend the line to Potsdamer Platz in Stage 2 and Yorckstraße in Stage 3, thus creating a second north-south S-Bahn line (to be known as S21) through central Berlin. Opening of the entire line is not expected until 2037.


2027

An extension of the Stolberg (Rheinland) Hbf to Stolberg Altstadt passenger service to Breinig (now a part of Stolberg so officially known as Stolberg-Breinig) is not now due to open until 2027. Progress was originally delayed by the need to lower the trackbed under a bridge at Stolberg Altstadt to provide safe clearance for the overhead wires, and by serious damage sustained to the existing line in the July 2021 floods.

Reopening of the northern section of the Gessertshausen - Markt Wald Staudenbahn as far as Langenneufnach has been agreed with the much-delayed construction (including electrification) beginning in 2026 and opening scheduled for December 2027.

The TWE (Teutoburger Wald-Eisenbahn) is to be reopened in December 2027 between Harsewinkel, Gütersloh and Verl (Bz Detmold).

A new S4 line of the S-Bahn Hamburg is under construction. It will run from the existing S1 station of Hasselbrook to Bad Oldesloe. It will have its own new formation from Hasselbrook to Ahrensburg-Gartenholz, which will be double-track from Hasselbrook to Ahrensburg and single-track to Gartenholz, where it will merge with the existing Hamburg to Lübeck main line. The new line will have 1200 V dc third-rail electrification as far as Bovestraße, just beyond the former Wandsbek station, and 15 kV ac overhead electrification from there to Gartenholz. The first section as far as Hamburg-Rahlstedt is due to open in 2027, with the remainder following in 2029. The second stage may be delayed by up to a year by planning permission objections.

It is planned to introduce a regular passenger service between Bremervörde and Stade by the end of 2027. Currently only the summer weekend trains between Bremen and Stade run on this route.

Work was due to start in January 2024 on the reactivation of the Horlofftalbahn between Wölfersheim-Södel and Hungen, but these works will now not start until late 2026, with reopening delayed until December 2027 at the earliest.

The first 2.9 km of the Wrist - Itzehoe line as far as Kellinghusen is to be reopened. Financing was agreed in December 2019 after years of procrastination, but opening has been deferred until 2027 at the earliest; mainly, it is reported, because of flood protection issues in Kellinghusen. New overhead electrification masts are visible on the branch from passing trains on the main line, so progress is definitely being made, albeit slowly.

2028

Stuttgart S-Bahn line S2 is to be extended by 4 km by reopening the route between Filderstadt and Neuhausen auf den Fildern, which was closed to passengers in 1955, and completely in 1983. Financing was approved in late 2022 with construction starting in mid-2023. Opening is now delayed until December 2028.

The reopening and electrification of Homburg (Saar) to Einöd (Saar) is planned for December 2028, with construction due to start in autumn 2025. The electrification will extend over the existing line to Zweibrücken to allow through electric S-Bahn services from Homburg.

An extension of Kassel RegioTram route RT5 from Melsungen to Melsungen Süd is now planned to come into service in 2028, some five years later than originally planned. The station at Melsungen Süd will be on a short spur just off the main line.

Provisionally in December 2028 the AKN (Altona-Kaltenkirchen-Neumünster Eisenbahn) line from Hamburg Eidelstedt to Kaltenkirchen will be electrified at 15 kV AC and incorporated into the Hamburg S-Bahn as an extension of the S5 which will then no longer terminate at Elbgaustrasse.

A west-to-south curve is under construction to link the Lübeck - Bad Kleinen line with the main line to Schwerin, avoiding Bad Kleinen. To be known as the Gallentiner Kurve, this will allow direct trains to run between Lübeck and Schwerin. Work started in June 2025 with an estimated opening date of 2028.

2029

The Euregiobahn line from Herzogenrath to Stolberg (Rheinl.) via Alsdorf-Annapark is to be extended with an electrified branch line from Alsdorf-Kellersberg to Alsdorf-Mariagrube. This is planned for December 2029. A further extension to Aldenhoven-Siersdorf is planned for December 2033. An invitation to tender for these services was issued in August 2025.

Preliminary work has started on the reconstruction of the closed 4.46 km Berlin S-Bahn branch from Jungfernheide to Gartenfeld. Known as the Siemensbahn, as it served the large factory of that firm, the last train ran on September 17 1980. With the closure of the factory in 2018, a research campus and large residential development is being built on the site. Reopening of the line is planned for Autumn 2029. A study is underway for a possible new-build extension to Hakenfelde.

Reopening of the line from Wittgensdorf to Limbach-Oberfrohna is planned as Stage 4 of the Chemnitzer Modell tram-train system. This is targeted for late 2029.

2030

The Barth - Zingst - Prerow Darßbahn is to be reopened. Tripartite funding, split between the federal government, Land Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and the Usedomer Bäderbahn has been agreed for the reconstruction of the Meiningenbrücke road/rail bridge just north of Bresewitz, which will allow reopening of the entire line to Prerow. This is now targeted for 2030.

2031

In February 2024 final approval was given to extending Berlin U-Bahn line U3 from Krumme Lanke to Mexikoplatz where a new interchange with the S-Bahn will be available. It is planned to open in 2031.

2032

The Vögelfluglinie railway between [Lübeck -] Bad Schwartau and the island of Fehmarn is being completely rebuilt. It will be a double-track electrified railway, mostly on a new alignment which will in part run alongside the A1 Autobahn. The existing line from Lübeck to Puttgarden closed north of Neustadt (Holst.) Gbf on 30 August 2022. On reopening, it will form part of a new high-speed line to København via the Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link, which will include the world's longest immersed tube tunnel. Neustadt (Holst.) will be served by a link from Haffkrug on the new line to the existing line via Sierksdorf, which will become a branch line. The old route from Ratekau to Haffkrug through Timmendorfer Strand will be abandoned, as will the sections north of Neustadt, through Lensahn and Oldenburg (Holst.) and from Fehmarn-Burg to the previous terminus at Puttgarden. Most stations on the old route will have replacements on the new route, but they will be at some distance from the towns they are intended to serve, especially at Timmendorfer Strand. The railway on the Danish side is also being reconstructed. Opening of the new line was originally planned for 2029, but in July 2025 the Federal Ministry of Transport announced that it would not be ready until 2032.

The Niederbarnimer Eisenbahn is rebuilding the line from Berlin-Wilhelmsruh to Wilhelmsruher Damm, therefore reopening the Heidekrautbahn between Bornholmer Straße and Schönwalde (Barnim) to passenger service for trains from Berlin-Gesundbrunnen to Basdorf and beyond. This was originally planned for December 2024 but may now be as late as 2032. The existing line via Berlin-Karow will be retained.

Projected Developments

Note: As this section has become extremely large, it has been rearranged into sub-sections for each Land, and in approximate date order (earliest projected opening to latest or undated) in each section. Note that any scheme that has definitely been given the go-ahead and has a concrete opening date (even if this is likely to slip) should be in "Forthcoming Openings" above, under the appropriate year heading.

Baden-Württemberg

The District (Landkreis) of Tübingen is planning to convert some lines in their area to a tram-train system known as Regional-Stadtbahn Neckar-Alb. This involves construction of a new line known as the Gomaringer Spange between Nehren, on the Tübingen - Balingen line, and Reutlingen. This will partially re-use the formation of the Reutlingen West to Gomaringen branch. Other plans include the reopening of the Albstadt-Ebingen to Albstadt-Onstmettingen and Engstingen to Reutlingen lines, and the introduction of a regular passenger service between Hechingen and Burladingen on the line to Gammertingen. Tramway-style lines into Tübingen town centre and through Reutlingen are also planned.

Reopening of the line across the Rhein between Breisach and Colmar (France) is planned.

Reopening of Ludwigsburg - Markgröningen is also under consideration.

Bayern

A new S-Bahn line between Fürth (Bayern) Hbf and Eltersdorf via Fürth-Steinach is planned but construction has been delayed by legal challenges. The new S-Bahn lines will be brought into use where they run parallel to the main lines, but the original line between Fürth-Stadeln (north of Fürth Klinikum) and Königsmühle (south of Eltersdorf) will remain a two-track bottleneck until the S-Bahn deviation is eventually opened. This is not now expected until the mid-2030s. A freight bypass in tunnel, avoiding Fürth Hbf by linking the west end of the Nürnberg southern ring line with Eltersdorf, is also planned.

Dombühl - Dinkelsbühl was planned for reopening to passengers in December 2019, but this has been deferred. It is still planned to open the line to Dinkelsbühl or even Wilburgstetten, but a definite date for this is not currently known.

The Landshut (Bay) – Plattling line is to be upgraded with four new passing loops and two extended ones. A short section of the line will be doubled and line-speed improvements are planned. These improvements will allow a half-hourly service on the RE3 "Donau-Isar Express" service between Passau and München. Also planned is a single-track curve to the west of Plattling, linking the Landshut and Regensburg lines, but this may only be intended for use by freight, primarily traffic to and from the large BMW factory at Dingolfing.

Reopening of the Münchener Güternordring (München northern freight ring line) for passenger transport is planned.

Berlin and Brandenburg

The Potsdamer Stammbahn (Zehlendorf to Griebnitzsee) is projected to reopen, to give a more direct route between Berlin and Potsdam for regional trains. The main line tracks from Schöneberg to Zehlendorf through Rathaus Steglitz, out of service since the war and subsequently lifted, will also be reinstated, along with a possible curve to the Innenring at Schöneberg. This may not occur until the early 2030s.

Planning work has started to reopen the S-Bahn line from Spandau to Falkensee in the early 2030s. It was closed in 1961.

Other projects in the i2030 scheme for rail development in Berlin and Brandenburg include:

  • Reopening of the S2 from Blankenfelde to Rangsdorf along the Dresdner Bahn, in conjunction with the rebuilding of the long-distance lines north of Blankenfelde
  • Extension of the S21 from Teltow Stadt over a new-build line to Stahnsdorf
  • Extension of the S75 along the Außenring to Karow
  • Reopening of the S25 between Hennigsdorf and Velten (Mark).

Reinstatement of regional tracks between Schönholz and Hennigsdorf to give a more direct route to the Wittstock line was considered but has been discounted on cost grounds. However capacity improvements between Velten (Mark) and Neuruppin are still going ahead.

Longer term it is planned to build a new S-Bahn line from Grünau to Springfühl via Wuhlheide. Plans for this line were already developed by the DDR in the 1980s.

Hessen

The Lumdatalbahn (Lollar – Mainzlar – Londorf) is registered for inclusion in a federal funding package for reopening.

The following lines are also under consideration for reopening:

  • Neu-Isenburg Bf – Neu-Isenburg Stadtzentrum
  • Kirchhain - Nieder-Gemünden (mittelhessische Ohmtalbahn)
  • Darmstadt - Groß-Zimmern
  • Wiesbaden - Diez (in Rheinland-Pfalz) (Aartalbahn)
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern

Land Mecklenburg-Vorpommern published an invitation to tender in 2024 which included reinstatement of passenger services between Hagenow Stadt and Zarrentin (23.9 km) from December 2025. This line lost its passenger trains in May 2000. However in the award of the tender in November 2025 for Parchim area services to ODEG (the incumbent operator), there was no mention of any extension to Zarrentin. Apparently it remains an objective but requires federal funding and any new service is not expected to start until 2028 at the earliest, if at all.

In August 2023, the Länder of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Brandenburg launched their review into the development and potential reopening of all or part of the so-called Karower Kreuz network radiating from Karow (Meckl). This covers the north-south Neustadt (Dosse) – Pritzwalk – Meyenburg – Karow – Güstrow route which has sparse services south of Meyenburg and is closed north of there apart from summer weekend services between Karow and Plau am See, and the east-west Mecklenburger Südbahn (Parchim – Waren (Müritz)) which only has summer weekend services between Parchim and Inselstadt Malchow.

In early 2020, the Prime Minister and Transport Minister of Land Mecklenburg-Vorpommern restated their commitment to the rebuilding of Ducherow – Świnoujście/Swinemünde (Poland) but as this project would involve complete reconstruction of the bridge at Karnin between the mainland and the island of Usedom, this would appear to be a long-term aspiration.

Niedersachsen

Plans to re-open the line between Salzgitter-Lebenstedt and Salzgitter-Fredenberg surface every few years. The most recent study, which reported in early 2025, concluded that reopening was viable so some progress may at last be made on this scheme. The line is planned to be built and owned by the Land Niedersachsen-owned infrastructure company SinON (Schieneninfrastruktur Ost-Niedersachsen, formerly OHE) as this will be quicker and cheaper than having it built by DB InfraGO.

Reopening of Buchholz (Nordheide) - Hamburg-Harburg via Jesteburg is under consideration.

Nordrhein-Westfalen

In early 2023, the new public transport authority for the Köln/Aachen areas, known as go.Rheinland, announced its plans for the networks of 2032 and 2040. By 2032 the following lines are planned to be reopened to passengers:

  • Linnich – Hückelhoven-Baal
  • Erkelenz – Baal – Ratheim
  • Stolberg-Breinig – Walheim – Eupen (BE).

By 2040 further reopenings are planned:

  • Ratheim – Wassenberg
  • Dalheim – Roermond (NL)
  • Köln-Mülheim – Opladen via Morsbroich
  • Köln Frankfurter Straße – Köln Süd via the Südbrücke
  • Gummersbach-Dieringhausen – Waldbröl (although a study in 2023 rejected potential reopening of this line as too costly given the likely demand and poor journey time to Köln).

The following lines have also been mentioned as possible candidates for reopening:

  • Oberhausen - Spellen (Walsumbahn)
  • Duisburg Hbf - Düsseldorf-Rath (Ratinger Weststrecke)
  • Kellersberg – Baesweiler
Rheinland-Pfalz

The Langenlonsheim – Büchenbeuren Hunsrückquerbahn, which has been without regular traffic for over 20 years, is in the process of being reactivated for freight traffic, which is expected to start running some time in 2025. It is intended at some point to start running passenger trains over the route as well.

Saarland

Land Saarland announced in mid-2025 that it was to go ahead with the reopening of three branch lines by the early 2030s:

  • Dillingen (Saar) – Schmelz-Limbach (21.3 km), plus the connecting line to the existing Lebach-Jabach station (3 km) (Primstalbahn)
  • Saarbrücken – Völklingen-Fürstenhausen – Großrosseln (15.1 km) (Rosseltalbahn)
  • Völklingen-Fürstenhausen – Überherrn (17.4 km) (Bisttalbahn).

All three lines are expected to become part of a new Saarbrücken S-Bahn system, with lightweight tram-trains to be used on the latter two lines.

Sachsen

As Stage 5 of the Chemnitzer Modell tram-train network, a new connection is planned between Stollberg (Sachs) station and the line to St. Egidien. This will run south of Stollberg station on the formation of the former line to Zwönitz, then run west and north around Stollberg as a completely new-build line, joining the existing line to St. Egidien a few hundred metres east of Niederwürschnitz station. Once this section is open, the existing line from the north end of Stollberg station towards Niederwürschnitz will presumably close. Services over the new line will be extended from St. Egidien to run to Glauchau (Sachs).

In July 2024, DB RegioNetz Infrastruktur GmbH published an invitation to tender for the planning phase of the reopening to passengers of the line between Pockau-Lengefeld and Marienberg. A planned date for reopening is not yet known.

Sachsen-Anhalt

Reopening of part of the Kanonenbahn over the bridge over the river Elbe between Gnadau, Barby and Güterglück is under consideration.

In the "tourist/museum line" sector

The Warnetalbahn GmbH, which operates the museum line between Salzgitter-Bad and Börßum, took a lease in December 2019 of the line between Rottleberode and Stolberg (Harz), with the intention to run freight (timber) trains and occasional tourist passenger services. The branch from Berga-Kelbra closed to passengers in December 2011 and had been conmpetely out of service since then. Unfortunately because of the condition of a bridge over the river Thyra at Rottleberode, the reintroduction of regular services to Stolberg has been postponed indefinitely, although occasional excursion trains have run since December 2022.

Schleswig-Holstein

Reopening of approximately 3 km of the Rendsburg - Husum line as far as a new station at Rendsburg-Seemühlen is planned, with two new intermediate halts.

Planned permanent closures (without replacement)

With the timetable change on 14 December 2025, it is expected that Regional services to and from Schönefeld (b. Berlin) (the former Flughafen Schönefeld station, latterly Flughafen BER Terminal 5) will cease, thus leaving the curve between Grünauer Kreuz West and Grünauer Kreuz Süd and the section of the Außenring between Grünauer Kreuz Süd and Schönefeld with little or no service. This will leave Schönefeld station served only by the S-Bahn; given the extremely low demand at the station since the closure of Terminal 5, this would appear to be more than adequate.

The weekend-only extension of the RB27 service between Wensickendorf and Schmachtenhagen is to cease from the December 2025 timetable change. Services used to run to serve a farmers' market at Schmachtenhagen but that apparently has closed, so the demand for the service has dried up. Services on the section between Basdorf and Wensickendorf will be cut back to weekday peak-hours only at the same time.

The peak-hour RE8 trains between Berlin and Finsterwalde (Niederlausitz) will be withdrawn from the December 2025 timetable change. This will leave the north to east curve at Doberlug (Abzw Doberlug-Kirchhain Nord) – Abzw Hennersdorf West) without passenger services.

There has been some doubt about the future of services on the Neustadt (Dosse) – Pritzwalk line (KBS 209.73), particularly the section between Kyritz Am Burgerpark and Pritzwalk, and on the Pritzwalk West – Pritzwalk – Meyenburg line (KBS 209.74) for several years. Between August 2025 and April 2026, the section between Wusterhausen (Dosse) and Neustadt (Dosse) will be closed to allow reconstruction of the main line through Neustadt. After some initial misunderstandings, Land Brandenburg has assured the local councils in the area that the entire Neustadt – Pritzwalk – Meyenburg line is to be retained at least in the short term, with a tender issued in June 2025 for services for 36 months from December 2025.

In the "tourist/museum line" sector:

In August 2025, the Ministry for Infrastructure and Development of Land Sachsen approved the request of the owners of the Adorf (Vogtl) – Zwotental line (Regio Infra Service Sachsen GmbH (RIS)) to close it from December 2025. This will mean an end to the Musikwinkel-Express tourist service and other excursions that use the line. The 12.7 km-long line lost its scheduled passenger services in December 2012, by which time they only ran at weekends. Local politicians are opposing the closure, not least because one branch of the Sachsen government (the tourism department) had supported the venture with grants while another branch decided to close it down.

Planned permanent closures (with replacement)

As a result of the reinstatement of the main-line tracks of the Dresdner Bahn between Berlin Südkreuz and Glasower Damm, expected on 14 December 2025, the following line is expected to lose most if not all of its services, as the FEX (Flughafen-Express) service will be replaced with a new airport express service via Glasower Damm.

  • Berlin Gesundbrunnen – Berlin Ostkreuz via the Ringbahn Ferngleise.

The main-line terminus station at Hamburg-Altona is due to close with a replacement through station being built roughly on the site of the previous Diebsteich S-Bahn station. The low-level S-Bahn station at Altona will remain, although with a change of name to "Mitte Altona". According to the project website the planned opening date of the new Altona main-line station is 2027. The proposed track layout and usage can be seen here.

There have been numerous deviations of railways to allow open-cast mining. There will be a significant re-routing of the Görlitz to Cottbus line, with the the closure of around 10 km of the existing line between Weißwasser and Rietschen, to be replaced by a 13 km-long deviation to the east. Work is due to start in March 2024 with the line opening in June 2027. See this DB pdf about the project.

The mainline tracks between Stuttgart-Vaihingen and Stuttgart Hbf (line 4860, part of the Gäubahn) will close permanently at end of traffic on 23 April 2026. They will eventually be replaced by a new tunnel connection to the underground Hauptbahnhof and the new line to Ulm but this is not expected to open until December 2032. Until the new line opens, passengers from the southwest, including those on IC trains from Zürich, will have to change to the S-Bahn at Stuttgart-Vaihingen.

It is planned to build a new Fangschleuse station on the Berlin - Franfurt (Oder) line, west of the existing one at the north end of a currently under construction extension to the Tesla electric car factory. This station is expected to replace both the current Fangschleuse station and Fangschleuse Tesla Süd, the latter only opened on 4 September 2023 serving the existing part of the factory. This will mean the withdrawal of the passenger service from Erkner to Fangschleuse Tesla Süd via a previously freight only branch, with presumably complete closure of the approx. 0.5 km line off the GVZ freight branch into the station itself. A date for this closure is not yet known.

Temporary closures

Baden-Württemberg

Electrification from Basel Badischer Bahnhof to Erzingen (Baden) (KBS 730) is due to start in September 2025 with completion scheduled for the December 2027 timetable change. During the work there will be no trains between Rheinfelden and Erzingen from April 2026 until March 2027. The closure will then be reduced to Rheinfelden to Erzingen which should reopen in July 2027.

Bayern

The Nürnberg to Bayreuth line has been closed between Hersbruck (rechts Pegnitz) and Pegnitz since 18 September 2025 because of the poor condition of two bridges. The line is not expected to reopen until February 2026. Trains to and from Neukirchen via the connecting line to the links Pegnitz route are unaffected.

Berlin and Brandenburg

Between 2 August 2025 and 30 April 2026, the Hamburger Bahn between Berlin and Hamburg will be closed for almost all of its length (between Berlin-Spandau and the outskirts of Hamburg). Long-distance trains between Berlin and Hamburg will be diverted via Stendal and Uelzen and local services replaced by buses. Other connecting lines will also be closed; see the respective Land heading for details.

Also between 2 August 2025 and 30 April 2026, the Berlin to Pritzwalk line (KBS 206) will be closed between Velten (Mark) or Kremmen and Neuruppin. RE6 services are diverted via Herzberg (Mark) - see "Openings" above;

The Berlin Hbf (tief/low level) to Jüterbog line (KBS 203) will be closed between Berlin Südkreuz and Jüterbog from 24 September to 13 December 2025. Between 24 October and 13 December, the closure will be extended to include the section between Berlin Südkreuz and Berlin Hbf (tief/low level). This closure also affects trains via Blankenfelde (Teltow-Fläming) and Elsterwerda (RE8S and IC/EC services to/from Dresden, which will be diverted via Berlin Ostkreuz).

The two tracks for regional and long distance trains between Berlin Ostbahnhof and Charlottenburg will be closed from start of traffic 14.06.2026 until end of traffic 12.12.2026; see this press report. The two S-Bahn tracks will remain operational.

Hessen

The line between Frankfurt an Main-Höchst and Bad Soden (Taunus) (KBS 643) is closed from 29 March 2024 until probably 2028 and the RB11 service replaced by buses. This is in connection with construction of the new Regionaltangente West line, which will link the Bad Homburg and Bad Soden lines via Eschborn.

Mecklenburg-Vorpommern

The Hamburger Bahn (Hamburg – Berlin) will be closed between 1 August 2025 and 30 April 2026 between the outskirts of Hamburg and Wustermark. Long-distance Hamburg – Berlin trains are diverted via Uelzen and Stendal, and local trains are replaced by buses. Long-distance trains between Hamburg and Rostock/Stralsund are diverted via Lübeck with no services running between Hagenow Land and Schwerin Süd, Ludwigslust and Parchim or between Ludwigslust and Schwerin Süd.

Niedersachsen

The line between Ihrhove and Nieuweschans (KBS 397) closed after a ship hit and destroyed the main span of the bridge over the River Ems on 3 December 2015. DB has reconstructed the bridge, and the line is now expected to reopen fully on 14 December 2025. The train service on the German section west of the bridge, between Nieuweschans and Weener, resumed on 30 October 2016. Once the bridge has reopened a direct Bremen – Groningen service is planned, to be known as the "Wunderline".

ICE trains between Berlin and Hamburg are diverted via Stendal and Uelzen between 1 August 2025 and 30 April 2026 owing to work on the direct route via Ludwigslust. This means that westbound trains are expected to use the Veerßer Kurve at Uelzen (DE25/188).

Nordrhein-Westfalen

The following lines remain closed after the severe floods of mid-July 2021. Planned reopening dates are as below.

  • 475 Euskirchen – Bad Münstereifel (14 December 2025)
  • 482 (part) Stolberg (Rheinl) Hbf – Eschweiler West (14 December 2025)
  • 482 (part) Stolberg-Rathaus – Stolberg Altstadt (14 June 2026).

The service from Bottrop Hbf to Duisburg-Ruhrort (KBS 447) is closed and replaced by buses for the whole of the 2024-25 timetable period because of staff shortages. This means that there is no service on the lines between Bottrop Hbf and Abzw Oberhausen Obn via Oberhausen-Osterfeld Süd and between Oberhausen Hbf and Duisburg-Ruhrort.

The section of KBS 437 between Unna and Fröndenberg has been closed since December 2022 because at least 140 badger tunnels were found to have undermined the whole line. In June 2025 DB InfraGO announced that work to reinstate the line will start in 2027 and trains will resume in 2028. RB54 services are replaced by buses until then.

The Rothaarbahn from Erndtebrück to Bad Berleburg (KBS 443) was closed between Aue-Wingeshausen and Bad Berleburg on 18 May 2025 by DB InfraGO because of the dilapidated state of two bridges on the route. Reopening is not foreseen before 2029.

Rheinland-Pfalz

The Zellertalbahn between Monsheim, Langmeil (Pfalz) and Münchweiler (Alsenz) (KBS 662.1) has been closed since 2018 because of the condition of the track. The most recent planned start date of 2 August 2025 did not happen. A new start date is not yet known but is likely to be around April 2026 at the earliest.

The western end of the Ahrtalbahn (KBS 477) between Walporzheim and Ahrbrück remains closed after suffering severe damage in the floods of mid-July 2021. It is being rebuilt and electrified and is due to reopen on 14 December 2025.

DB InfraGO closed the Neustadt (Weinstr) – Bad Dürkheim line (KBS 667) between Deidesheim and Bad Dürkheim from 17 March 2025 because it has been undermined by badger tunnels. Reopening is expected in December 2025 at the earliest.

Sachsen-Anhalt

The short (2.9 km) branch of the Harzer Schmalspurbahnen system between Alexisbad and Harzgerode is closed from 25 April 2025 until the end of November with passengers to use parallel scheduled buses instead as there will be no rail replacement service provided.

Schleswig-Holstein

Because of the condition of the Lindaunisbrücke combined road-rail bascule bridge over the Schlei sea inlet between Rieseby and Süderbrarup on the Kiel to Flensburg line (KBS 146), it was closed to rail traffic on 31 October 2021. Since September 15 2022 the service has terminated at temporary platforms either side of the inlet, known as Rieseby Schleibrücke Süd and Boren-Lindaunis Schleibrücke Nord, with passengers having to walk over a newly-built footbridge between them, a distance of 264 metres. A 126-metre long replacement bascule bridge is to be built, 13 metres to the east of the old bridge. Unfortunately the EBA (Federal Railway Authority) has introduced new, stricter, standards for railway bridges and so DB's plans for the bridge have been delayed and completion is not expected for several years.

Museum lines

As a result of serious flood damage in June 2024, the Schwäbische Waldbahn between Rudersberg and Welzheim is suspended. Financing for reconstruction has been secured and museum services are expected to resume in May 2026. Regular passenger services resumed over part of the shared section between Rudersberg and Rudersberg Nord (0.8 km) in May 2025.

The Bremen-Thedinghauser Eisenbahn ("Pingelheini") service closed once again between Stuhr and Leeste (b. Bremen) after service on 16 June 2024, so that work can actually commence on the long-awaited extension of Bremen tram route no. 8. This section originally closed at the end of the 2015 season to allow work on the tram extension but reopened on 22 August 2021 with no progress on the tramway having been made. It is believed that eventually the Pingelheini trains will resume as far as Bremen-Kirchhuchting, sharing the track with the trams as far as a junction just short of there.

Services on the museum line between Rinteln and Stadthagen were thought to have ended after a final day of operation on 21 April 2024, because extensive repairs to bridges and track were required. However in March 2025 it was announced that the line has been taken over by the Diepholzer Kreisbahn, principally for goods traffic, but this will also allow the museum service to resume at some point.

The museum line between Bremerhaven-Fischereihafen, Bremerhaven Hbf and Bad Bederkesa last had scheduled services on 17 September 2023. According to their website. no services were offered in 2024 and the site has not even been updated for 2025. It is not known when, or even if, services will resume.

The Wiehltalbahn from Gummersbach-Dieringhausen to Waldbröl was closed in summer 2020 because of fire damage to a bridge over the Wiehl river at Bielstein. It was reopened as far as Wiehl on 26 March 2023; however their website does not show any journeys since August 2023, apart from short draisine runs in Waldbröl in September 2025. In July 2025, the line's owners, Rhein-Sieg Eisenbahn GmbH, announced that they would be putting the line up for transfer to another operator, but if this was not successful, they would be applying to have the line officially closed.

The Museums-Eisenbahn-Club Losheim was closed suddenly in April 2017 by the authorities because of the condition of the track. Following this closure, trains only ran between Großer Wald and Dellborner Mühle and since September 2022 no trains have run at all. In mid-2025, Land Saarland decided not to proceed with a scheme to reopen the line to regular passenger traffic, following objections from the local authorities on the route. One of the grounds for objection was the effect that the reopening would have on the preservation operation. Ironically in May 2025, the Merzig and Losheim town councils, as infrastructure owners (EIU), also the district council, all voted to close the line completely and probably replace it with a cycle path. However in July 2025, the preservation society MECL with the backing of a local entrepreneur stated that they wished to buy the line. Apparently if a line is put up for formal closure but another bidder wishes to take it on, the line cannot be closed despite the wishes of the current owners, so it may be that the line will be saved at the eleventh hour.

Older Changes

For details of older changes see Germany - Older General Information.

Special notes

Train services in Germany are divided into a number of distinct categories:

  • S (S-Bahn): Regular interval local trains in urban and suburban areas, often using segregated tracks, particularly in city centres.
  • RB (Regionalbahn): Basic local services, usually calling at all stations except where a parallel S-Bahn route exists.
  • RE (RegionalExpress): Regular interval local or semi-fast trains calling at fewer stations than RB services.
  • IRE (Inter-Regional Express): Long-distance semi-fast trains. This designation is now only used for the infrequent Kulturzug services between Berlin and Wrocław; it ceased being used in Baden-Württemberg at the December 2024 timetable change when the remaining IRE services there became standard RE.
  • IC (InterCity): Long-distance expresses, making limited stops. 'Traditional' loco-hauled IC trains are now rare with many former IC services having been converted to ICE operation and many of those that remain being operated with double-deck IC2 rolling stock.
  • EC (EuroCity): Similar to IC, but for international journeys, often using non-German rolling stock.
  • RJ / RJX (Railjet / Railjet Xpress): High-speed Austrian Railways (ÖBB) trains, mainly to and from München via Salzburg.
  • ICE (InterCity Express) & ICE Sprinter: High-speed, long-distance electric trains worked with dedicated ICE trainsets. These are the only trains to operate on certain stretches of high-speed line (Schnellfahrstrecken) such as between Frankfurt (Main) and Köln and between Hannover and Würzburg.
  • ECE (EuroCity Express): Trains between München and Zürich are designated ECE and are operated by Swiss Railways (SBB) high-speed trainsets.
  • EST (Eurostar): High-speed trains on the Köln – Brussels – Paris route, managed by the French and Belgian railways, rebranded from Thalys in October 2023. Not to be confused with the Paris/Brussels – London services through the Channel Tunnel, although they have been part of the same group since 2021.
  • NJ (Nightjet): Almost all of the remaining sleeper trains to and from Germany are operated by ÖBB (Austrian Railways) and branded as "Nightjet", the exceptions being non-ÖBB operated services such as those to Stockholm (operated by SJ) or Zagreb (operated by HZ) which retain the designation EN (EuroNight).
  • D-Zug: This designation is derived from Durchgang, the German for corridor. Its use for regular passenger trains is now very rare — the only remaining instances in Germany are on the Snälltåget-operated Berlin – Malmö – Stockholm overnight services. It may still be used for an excursion or other special passenger train.

A few services operate only during school term time, or are extensively altered during school holidays. The dates of holidays vary from Land to Land.

A brief Guide to German railway terminology is available.

See also