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==National Railway System==
==National Railway System==
Railway infrastructure is owned and maintained by  Rede Ferroviária Nacional (REFER), while Caminhos de Ferro Portugueses (CP) is responsible for the operation of most trains. Both are state-owned.
===National Railway Operator===
Caminhos de Ferro Portugueses, the former national operator CP, has been broken down into separate elements.  


==Official Website==
The <b>passenger</b> operation is now [https://www.cp.pt/institucional/en/the-company CP Comboios de Portugal], a government owned company, currently organised into three business units.
[http://www.cp.pt www.cp.pt]
• Urban trains - Lisboa, Porto and  Coimbra; • Alfa Pendular, Intercidades and International trains; • Regional and InterRegional trains
 
The <b>freight</b> operation, CP Carga, was sold as a condition of Portugal's bailout by the European Union, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund; in January 2016 it was acquired by MSC Rail, a subsidiary of Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) with locomotives and wagons branded "Medway".


==Language==
==Language==
Line 19: Line 22:
==Timetable==
==Timetable==
===Journey Planner===
===Journey Planner===
[http://www.cp.pt/cp/displayPage.do?vgnextoid=a4f6f9e12a584010VgnVCM1000007b01a8c0RCRD www.cp.pt/cp/displayPage.do?vgnextoid=a4f6f9e12a584010VgnVCM1000007b01a8c0RCRD], then use the "Timetable Search" function.  
[https://www.cp.pt/passageiros/en/train-times Train times] A realtime App/webpage with a train number/traction search facility can be found [https://trainstatus.pt/ here].
 
===Downloadable Timetable===
===Downloadable Timetable===
[http://www.cp.pt/cp/displayPage.do?vgnextoid=a4f6f9e12a584010VgnVCM1000007b01a8c0RCRD www.cp.pt/cp/displayPage.do?vgnextoid=a4f6f9e12a584010VgnVCM1000007b01a8c0RCRD], then choose from "Timetables in PDF Format".  
* CP: [https://www.cp.pt/passageiros/en/train-times Train times], then scroll down to "Timetables in PDF Format".
* Fertagus: [https://www.fertagus.pt/en Fertagus] then select "Timetables"
<!---* [https://www.cm-mirandela.pt/pages/702 Metropolitano Ligeiro de Mirandela] then select 'english'. Timetable footnotes are: C = SSuO, D = daily, E = SSuX, grey = school days only.--->
 
===Printed Timetable===
===Printed Timetable===
None issued. Leaflets are available for Alfa Pendular / Intercidades (InterCity) and for suburban services around Lisboa and Porto. Fertagus issue their own timetable booklet. No printed material appears to be available for Regional services, only timetable board display posters; travellers by such services would be well advised to make their own print outs of the relevant web pages (which are the display posters).  
None issued. Leaflets are available for Alfa Pendular / Intercidades (InterCity) and for suburban services around Lisboa and Porto. Fertagus issue their own timetable booklet. No printed material appears to be available for Regional services, only timetable board display posters; travellers by such services would be well advised to make their own print outs of the relevant web pages (which are the display posters).  
===Engineering Information===
===Engineering Information===
[http://www.cp.pt/cp/displayPage.do?vgnextoid=6377f9e12a584010VgnVCM1000007b01a8c0RCRD www.cp.pt/cp/displayPage.do?vgnextoid=6377f9e12a584010VgnVCM1000007b01a8c0RCRD]  
[https://www.cp.pt/passageiros/en/train-times/Alerts Alerts]


==Maps==
==Maps==
A simplistic [http://www.cp.pt/ CP plan] (click English flag, then select "Travelling in Portugal") is available. More detailed maps are at [http://www.refer.pt/en/rede.php?id=692&amp;idold=691 REFER's site] and in [http://www.refer.pt/Documentos/Network_Statement%20_0010_REFER.pdf their Network Statement], page 50 onwards. [http://www.quailmapcompany.free-online.co.uk/ Quail Map Company's] Portugal Railway Map (second edition) is still available but there have been many network changes since it was published in 2001.  
===Printed Maps===
*[[Printed Maps#ERA-E | European Railway Atlas (All-Europe Edition)]] by M.G. Ball.
*[[Printed Maps#ERA-R-1  | European Railway Atlas (Regional Atlas Series, Book 1: Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Great Britain, Ireland, Portugal, Spain, France, Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg)]] by M.G. Ball.
*[[Printed Maps#QM-PT | Railway Map of Portugal]] by Quail Map Company.
 
===Web-based Maps===
*A simplistic [https://www.cp.pt/StaticFiles/Passageiros/3_viajar/0_servicos/mapa-servicos.pdf CP Network Map].
*More detailed maps are in IP's [https://servicos.infraestruturasdeportugal.pt/pt-pt/parceiros/operacao-ferroviaria/os-nossos-servicos/diretorio-da-rede-ips] (Network Statement, annex 3.2.1 and annex 3.3.1.1).
*Thorsten Büker's [https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/spain_portugal.html Iberia Map] dated September 2022, with enlargements for [https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/porto.html Porto] and [https://websites.umich.edu/~yopopov/rrt/railroadmaps/lisbon.html Lisbon]
 
==Ticketing==
See [https://www.cp.pt/passageiros/en/buy-tickets CP's tickets] page. Note the [https://www.cp.pt/passageiros/en/how-to-travel/For-leisure/pt-railpass The Portugal Rail Pass], which offers unlimited travel for non-residents.
 
See also [https://www.cp.pt/passageiros/en/discounts-benefits/Discounts discounts]. CP offers the Cartão Dourado for the over 60's, similar to RENFE's Tarjeta Dorada. However, CP requires applicants to offer official proof that their household income does not exceed the Portuguese average! There is however a straightforward 50% discount for over 65's on production of ID [as at September 2022].
 
==Infrastructure==
===Infrastructure Authority===
Railway infrastructure is owned and maintained by Infraestruturas de Portugal [https://www.infraestruturasdeportugal.pt/pt-pt/infraestruturas/rede-ferroviaria (IP)]- a merger of rail and road infrastructure authorities in 2015. There is no corporate entity with overall responsibility for railways see section 1.1 in the [https://servicos.infraestruturasdeportugal.pt/pt-pt/parceiros/operacao-ferroviaria/os-nossos-servicos/diretorio-da-rede-ips (Network Statement)]
 
===Network Statement===
The [https://servicos.infraestruturasdeportugal.pt/sites/default/files/inline-files/Diretorio%20da%20Rede%202025.pdf Infraestruturas de Portugal Network Statement].
 
===Gauge===
1668 mm.
 
The Aveiro – Sernada do Vouga – Espinho line is metre gauge.


==Gauge==
The metros and tramways in both Lisboa and Porto, and the Metro Sul do Tejo, are 1435 mm gauge. The Sintra tramway is metre gauge.
1668mm, with four separate systems of metre gauge (Aveiro/Espinho – Sernada do Vouga; Livração – Amarante; Régua – Vila Real; Tua – Mirandela)


==Electrification==
===Electrification===
25 kV 50 Hz, except for the former Estoril Railway from Lisboa Cais do Sodré to Cascais which is 1500V dc
25 kV 50 Hz.  The former Estoril Railway from Lisboa Cais do Sodré to Cascais is to be converted from 1500V dc to 25kV 50 Hz by the end of 2026.


==Rule of the road==
The Lisbon Metro (third rail), Metro de Sul and Porto light rail systems are 750 V dc. The Lisbon, Porto and Sintra heritage tramways are 600 V dc.
 
===Rule of the road===
Left
Left
===Distances===
In IP's [https://servicos.infraestruturasdeportugal.pt/sites/default/files/inline-files/Diretorio%20da%20Rede%202025.pdf Network Statement]:
* Annex 3.1 gives overall distances by Line
* Annex 3.3.1.1 gives more detailed distances between significant stations.


==Private Railways==
==Private Railways==
* Sociedade Metropolitano Ligeiro de Mirandela: Mirandela Metro [4.1km section of ex CP Metre gauge line]: Mirandela Piaget (close to CP station and adjacent to bus station) - Carvalhais. Single journey time 9 minutes. [operating its own infrastructure]
* Travessia do Tejo, Transportes SA: [https://www.fertagus.pt/ Fertagus]: (Lisboa) Roma-Areeiro - Campolide - (over Ponte 25 de Abril {25th April Bridge}) - Pragal - Pinhal Novo - Setúbal. Operates daily (operating on IP infrastructure)
* Travessia do Tejo, Transportes SA: [http://www.fertagus.pt/ Fertagus]: (Lisboa) Roma-Areeiro - Campolide - (over Ponte 25 de Abril) - Pragal - Pinhal Novo - Setúbal. Operates daily. [operating on REFER infrastructure]


==Tourist Lines==
==Tourist Lines==
* [http://www.cm-sintra.pt/ Sintra-Atlântico Tramway] [ > Turismo > Eléctrico de Sintra] (Metre gauge): Runs from Sintra (terminus in front of Vila Alda, close to the Museu de Arte Moderna in the Estefânea district - 8 mins walk from CP station) to Praia das Maçãs (ca. 12 km); operated seasonally by Sintra town council with scheduled services FSSuO June - September. Plans to extend back to Sintra CP station seem to have evaporated.  
* [https://visitsintra.travel/en/discover/sintra-tram Eléctrico de Sintra]: (Metre gauge): Sintra to Praia das Maçãs (11 km). Operated by Sintra town council: services approximately hourly Sat-Sun & holiday afternoons, and two-hourly weekday afternoons in summer; two round trips Wednesdays to Sundays in winter (follow ''Timetable'' link from [https://visitsintra.travel/en/discover/sintra-tram council's webpage]). Sintra terminus is in front of Vila Alda, close to the Museu de Arte Moderna in the Estefânea district - 10 mins walk from CP station (follow ''Map'' link from [https://visitsintra.travel/en/discover/sintra-tram council's webpage], although this does not show all of the request stops listed in the timetable).  
* Transpraia: (600mm gauge): Costa de Caparica - Fonte da Telha (7km); operates daily, June to September.  
* [https://www.transpraia.pt/index.php?nav=home Transpraia]: (600mm gauge): Costa de Caparica - Fonte da Telha (7 km) along the beach. Operated by Transportes Recreativos da Praia do Sol, Lda..  Whilst the website still advertises it to run daily, June to September, the northern terminus, Praia Nova, looked derelict on a visit in July 2020. Whilst that may be have been due to Covid-19 it was not obvious it had operated in 2019. '''The compilers would appreciate any up to date information.'''
* Barril railway: (600mm gauge): Pedras d'el Rei - Praia do Barril (beach) (1km); operates frequently, during summer.  
* [https://algarve-south-portugal.com/tavira/Praia-do-Barril-Tavira.html Praia do Barril railway]: (600mm gauge): Pedras d'el Rei - Praia do Barril (beach) (1 km); operates frequently, during summer.


==Metros==
==Metros==
[http://www.metrolisboa.pt/eng Lisboa]; [http://www.metrodoporto.pt/en Porto]; [http://www.mts.pt/ Sul do Tejo]. Metro Mondego is under construction, incorporating CP's now-closed Ramal da Lousã (Serpins branch), to serve the communities of Coimbra, Lousã and Miranda do Corvo.
[https://www.metrolisboa.pt/en/ Lisboa]; [https://en.metrodoporto.pt/ Porto]; [https://www.mts.pt/ Sul do Tejo].
 
A track plan for the Metro Sul do Tejo is available on the [https://www.gleisplanweb.eu/index-e.php Gleisplanweb site].
 
== Trams/LRT-Systems ==
*[https://www.carris.pt/en/ Lisboa] (five routes)
*[https://en.metrodoporto.pt/frontoffice/pages/396 Porto] (three routes)
*Sintra (see [[#Tourist Lines|Tourist Lines]], above). The Lisboa system contains the steepest adhesion worked tram tracks in the world, a gradient of 15% on route 28 on the west side of the city.
 
Track plans for all tram systems in Portugal are available on the [https://www.gleisplanweb.eu/index-e.php Gleisplanweb site].
 
See also [[Portugal_-_Tram_services_over_obscure_routes|Portugal - Tram services over obscure routes]]
 
The Light Rail Transit Association's publication, ''The Tramways of Portugal'' can still be recommended (despite being somewhat dated, its fourth edition having been published in 1995).
 
==Recent and Future Changes ''(most recent entries at top)''==
===Recent Changes ''(Latest First)''===
The Linha do Oeste between Lisboa, Leiria and Figueira da Foz is being modernised in two tranches. A contract was awarded on 28 June 2022 for the first phase: electrification and renewal of 85 km from Mira Sintra-Meleças to Torres Vedras, including elimination of 15 level crossings. However, the maximum running speed will remain at 110 km/h. Completion is due by the end of 2023.<br />
The second phase covers electrification of 44 km between Caldas da Rainha and Torres Vedras. The line speed will be raised from 120 km/h to 140 km/h. There is also to be a 2 km cut-off at Outeiro da Cabeça. However, this is just north of Torres Vedras, so it is unclear if this is included in the project or merely an aspiration.
 
Train services were suspended on the Beira Alta line (Pampilhosa - Guarda - Vilar Formoso) on 19 April 2022 for an estimated 9 months for a €550m modernisation programme. However services are still suspended as at December 2023. The priority was to increase the capacity for freight traffic, allowing the operation of 750m long trains rather than the existing 400m. This includes the new 3.2 km Concordância da Mealhada at Pampilhosa to allow direct access to the Porto area.
 
The Covilhã - Guarda section of the Beira Baixa line reopened to passengers on 2 May 2021, having been used for the first time by a freight train on 18 April, following electrification. Passenger services had ceased from 9 March 2009. This included the new 1.5 km ''Concordância das Beiras'' curve, avoiding Guarda.
 
Electrification of the final section of the Minho line, from Viana do Castelo to Valença, was officially inaugurated on 29 April 2021.
 
The RENFE combined Sud Express and Lusitania Trenhotel to/from Lisboa was suspended on 17 March 2020, following the national lockdown in Spain, and never reinstated. This was the only passenger train across the border between Vilar Formoso and Fuentes de Oñoro.
 
=== Future Changes===
Agreement has been reached to restore services on the (Porto -) Contumil - Leixões line. Services were reinstated in 2009 but suspended in 2011 because of low patronage, probably caused by their running to the inconvenient main line station of Ermesinde. The Contumil - Leça do Balio section is expected to begin running in 2024. Studies will be undertaken for the second phase to Leixões,
 
In late 2022 the government announced plans for a high speed ​​line between Lisboa Oriente and Porto Campanhã, with a €1bn contribution from the EU. This is a resurrection of the plan from 2005 which was a victim of the 2008 financial crash. The total length is 290 km. It is designed for operation at up to 300 km/h and will be 1668 mm gauge. This development is driven mainly by capacity constraints on the existing line. This is used in whole or in part by about 50% of all CP passenger services and 90% of all freight.
It is to be delivered in three phases.</br>
*The first phase covers the 143 km between Porto and Soure and is expected to cost around €3·7bn, of which €729m will come from the EU’s Connecting Europe Facility. It is divided into two lots: the 71 km between Porto and Oiã is estimated at €1·9bn and IP invited tenders for this work in January 2024. Tthe 72 km between Aveiro and Soure is estimated at at €1·7bn. The line would serve Porto’s Vila Nova de Gaia district with an underground station in Santo Ovídio, which will be served by the Metro do Porto light rail network. An additional road and rail bridge would be built between Porto and Gaia. Aveiro and Coimbra stations on the existing north-south main line would be redeveloped to enable high speed services to call; the plans envisage construction of a 17 km link from Aveiro to meet the new alignment at Canelas. Under current plans, the first section would be completed by 2028, reducing the travel time between Porto and Lisboa from 2h 50m to less than 2h.
*The second phase, between Soure and Carregado near Lisboa, has an estimated cost of €1·5bn, with completion scheduled for the end of 2030. This element of the scheme would include quadrupling of the existing line between Castanheira do Ribatejo and Alverca.
*The third phase, between Carregado and Lisboa, would be developed after 2030, reducing the Porto – Lisboa journey time to 1 h 15 min. The cost is estimated at €4·5bn.
 
In early February 2022 tenders were invited for the reconstruction of the 30 km metre gauge line between Oliveira de Azeméis and Sernada do Vouga. Work costing €4·9m should have been completed by the end of 2023, but has been delayed by 4 years.
 
Work to electrify Faro – Vila Real de Santo António started in November 2021. It was planned to be completed in October 2023 but work was still in progress in April 2024. Work on the Tunes – Lagos line was supposed to start in the second quarter of 2022 with completion planned by the end of 2024 but no firm information on the progress is available.
 
In September 2020 it was announced that the former Estoril Railway from Lisboa Cais do Sodré to Cascais was to be converted from 1500V DC to 25kV 50 Hz by the end of 2023. As at April 2024 no information is available.  


==Trams==
In April 2020 the EU announced funding for expansion of the Metro do Porto: a new Line G from São Bento north west to Casa da Música and an extension of Line D from Santo Ovídio south east to Vila D’Este.
[http://www.carris.pt/en/home Lisboa] (five routes); [http://www.stcp.pt/en/home/principal.htm Porto] (three routes); Sintra (see Tourist Lines, above). The Lisboa system contains the steepest adhesion worked tram tracks in the world, a gradient of 15% on route 28 on the west side of the city.


The Light Rail Transit Association's publication, ''The Tramways of Portugal'' can still be recommended (despite being somewhat dated, its fourth edition having been published in 1995).  
The long promised new freight line [South International Corridor] connecting the ports of Sines, [with connections from Setúbal and Lisboa] to Caia on the Spanish border near Badajoz is moving forward. The 79∙4 km new line between Évora and a triangular junction east of Elvas, which has gauge-convertible sleepers, is almost complete. It is possible a passenger service may start in early 2024. The route will be electrified at 25 kV 50 Hz.


==Recent and Future Changes==
The governmental 'strategic infrastructure plan' in preparation in summer 2018 contained no investment for the Casa Branca - Beja or Régua - Pocinho lines. They may therefore be in danger of closure, especially the latter which is not in good condition. The 2020 plan envisages the Douro line being electrified to Régua by 2025.
Considerable up-grading work (in many cases with electrification) has been undertaken on main lines in recent years - including a new route to the Algarve via the Ponte de 25 Abril bridge (opened 1999) over the Tagus in Lisboa. As well as converting former-CP metre gauge lines in Porto to be part of a standard (1435mm) gauge Metro system or to broad gauge (Guimarães branch), broad gauge lines radiating from that city have been electrified for various distances. The daily cross border service from Abrantes to Badajoz [RENFE] - withdrawn in 2004 - was restored at the end of 2009. It has been announced that the railway from Pocinho to Barca de Alva on the Douro Valley line will reopen - possibly in 2010. Two of the remaining sections of metre gauge line in the Douro valley (to Amarante and to Vila Real) closed in February 2009 for relaying, and should reopen later in 2010. The Tua - Brunheda section of the metre gauge line to Mirandela is currently (February 2010) closed and subject to threat of being lost forever in conjunction with a proposed barrage scheme; whether the currently isolated Brunheda - Mirandela section will then survive is moot. The lower section of the Linha da Beira Alta, between Pampilhosa and Figueira da Foz, is closed - ostensibly for temporarily, for relaying (although work has apparently not started). A new 9km freight line, to serve Aveiro docks, is complete but (at February 2010) awaits formalities to enable it to open for traffic. Elsewhere, away from the main lines and suburban areas, local services are struggling to survive - and many branches have already been closed to freight as well as passenger. The Ramal da Lousã (Coimbra - Serpins branch) has closed for conversion to metro operation (see "Metros" above).


The Leixões branch (near Porto) - closed to passengers since 1987 - is being reopened for passengers: the section between Ermesinde (not Contumil) and Leça do Balio reopened in 2009 and the remainder to Leixões is to follow on an unspecified date.
===Older Changes===
For details of older changes prior to 2019 see [[Portugal - Older General Information]].


==Special Notes==
==Special Notes==
Cascais (Estoril Railway) is now almost certainly the westernmost railhead in Europe (Valencia Harbour in Ireland held that honour until closure in 1960).  
Cascais (Estoril Railway) is now almost certainly the westernmost railhead in Europe (Valentia Harbour in Ireland held that honour until closure in 1960).  


Timetable direction contains a trap for the unwary: ''circulaçoes ascendentes'' (which one might translate as "up trains") are travelling away from the major terminal (and thus the opposite of British practice); such trains carry odd numbers (equivalent of French ''impair'').
Timetable direction contains a trap for the unwary: ''circulaçoes ascendentes'' (which one might translate as "up trains") are travelling away from the major terminal (and thus the opposite of most British practice); such trains carry odd numbers (equivalent of French ''impair'').


''Ramal'' = branch line; ''conc''. (''concordancia'') = chord or connection; ''ap''. (''apeadeiro'') = halt; ''bif''. (''bifurcação'') = junction.
''Ramal'' = branch line; ''conc''. (''concordancia'') = chord or connection; ''ap''. (''apeadeiro'') = halt; ''bif''. (''bifurcação'') = junction.


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Portugal]]
{{Navbox Portugal}}
*[[Portugal - General Information]]
[[Category:General Information]]

Latest revision as of 10:20, 20 April 2024

Country Name

Portugal (Portugal)

National Railway System

National Railway Operator

Caminhos de Ferro Portugueses, the former national operator CP, has been broken down into separate elements.

The passenger operation is now CP Comboios de Portugal, a government owned company, currently organised into three business units. • Urban trains - Lisboa, Porto and Coimbra; • Alfa Pendular, Intercidades and International trains; • Regional and InterRegional trains

The freight operation, CP Carga, was sold as a condition of Portugal's bailout by the European Union, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund; in January 2016 it was acquired by MSC Rail, a subsidiary of Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) with locomotives and wagons branded "Medway".

Language

Portuguese.

Currency

Euro.

UIC code

numeric 94; alpha P.

Timetable

Journey Planner

Train times A realtime App/webpage with a train number/traction search facility can be found here.

Downloadable Timetable

  • CP: Train times, then scroll down to "Timetables in PDF Format".
  • Fertagus: Fertagus then select "Timetables"

Printed Timetable

None issued. Leaflets are available for Alfa Pendular / Intercidades (InterCity) and for suburban services around Lisboa and Porto. Fertagus issue their own timetable booklet. No printed material appears to be available for Regional services, only timetable board display posters; travellers by such services would be well advised to make their own print outs of the relevant web pages (which are the display posters).

Engineering Information

Alerts

Maps

Printed Maps

Web-based Maps

  • A simplistic CP Network Map.
  • More detailed maps are in IP's [1] (Network Statement, annex 3.2.1 and annex 3.3.1.1).
  • Thorsten Büker's Iberia Map dated September 2022, with enlargements for Porto and Lisbon

Ticketing

See CP's tickets page. Note the The Portugal Rail Pass, which offers unlimited travel for non-residents.

See also discounts. CP offers the Cartão Dourado for the over 60's, similar to RENFE's Tarjeta Dorada. However, CP requires applicants to offer official proof that their household income does not exceed the Portuguese average! There is however a straightforward 50% discount for over 65's on production of ID [as at September 2022].

Infrastructure

Infrastructure Authority

Railway infrastructure is owned and maintained by Infraestruturas de Portugal (IP)- a merger of rail and road infrastructure authorities in 2015. There is no corporate entity with overall responsibility for railways see section 1.1 in the (Network Statement)

Network Statement

The Infraestruturas de Portugal Network Statement.

Gauge

1668 mm.

The Aveiro – Sernada do Vouga – Espinho line is metre gauge.

The metros and tramways in both Lisboa and Porto, and the Metro Sul do Tejo, are 1435 mm gauge. The Sintra tramway is metre gauge.

Electrification

25 kV 50 Hz. The former Estoril Railway from Lisboa Cais do Sodré to Cascais is to be converted from 1500V dc to 25kV 50 Hz by the end of 2026.

The Lisbon Metro (third rail), Metro de Sul and Porto light rail systems are 750 V dc. The Lisbon, Porto and Sintra heritage tramways are 600 V dc.

Rule of the road

Left

Distances

In IP's Network Statement:

  • Annex 3.1 gives overall distances by Line
  • Annex 3.3.1.1 gives more detailed distances between significant stations.

Private Railways

  • Travessia do Tejo, Transportes SA: Fertagus: (Lisboa) Roma-Areeiro - Campolide - (over Ponte 25 de Abril {25th April Bridge}) - Pragal - Pinhal Novo - Setúbal. Operates daily (operating on IP infrastructure)

Tourist Lines

  • Eléctrico de Sintra: (Metre gauge): Sintra to Praia das Maçãs (11 km). Operated by Sintra town council: services approximately hourly Sat-Sun & holiday afternoons, and two-hourly weekday afternoons in summer; two round trips Wednesdays to Sundays in winter (follow Timetable link from council's webpage). Sintra terminus is in front of Vila Alda, close to the Museu de Arte Moderna in the Estefânea district - 10 mins walk from CP station (follow Map link from council's webpage, although this does not show all of the request stops listed in the timetable).
  • Transpraia: (600mm gauge): Costa de Caparica - Fonte da Telha (7 km) along the beach. Operated by Transportes Recreativos da Praia do Sol, Lda.. Whilst the website still advertises it to run daily, June to September, the northern terminus, Praia Nova, looked derelict on a visit in July 2020. Whilst that may be have been due to Covid-19 it was not obvious it had operated in 2019. The compilers would appreciate any up to date information.
  • Praia do Barril railway: (600mm gauge): Pedras d'el Rei - Praia do Barril (beach) (1 km); operates frequently, during summer.

Metros

Lisboa; Porto; Sul do Tejo.

A track plan for the Metro Sul do Tejo is available on the Gleisplanweb site.

Trams/LRT-Systems

  • Lisboa (five routes)
  • Porto (three routes)
  • Sintra (see Tourist Lines, above). The Lisboa system contains the steepest adhesion worked tram tracks in the world, a gradient of 15% on route 28 on the west side of the city.

Track plans for all tram systems in Portugal are available on the Gleisplanweb site.

See also Portugal - Tram services over obscure routes

The Light Rail Transit Association's publication, The Tramways of Portugal can still be recommended (despite being somewhat dated, its fourth edition having been published in 1995).

Recent and Future Changes (most recent entries at top)

Recent Changes (Latest First)

The Linha do Oeste between Lisboa, Leiria and Figueira da Foz is being modernised in two tranches. A contract was awarded on 28 June 2022 for the first phase: electrification and renewal of 85 km from Mira Sintra-Meleças to Torres Vedras, including elimination of 15 level crossings. However, the maximum running speed will remain at 110 km/h. Completion is due by the end of 2023.
The second phase covers electrification of 44 km between Caldas da Rainha and Torres Vedras. The line speed will be raised from 120 km/h to 140 km/h. There is also to be a 2 km cut-off at Outeiro da Cabeça. However, this is just north of Torres Vedras, so it is unclear if this is included in the project or merely an aspiration.

Train services were suspended on the Beira Alta line (Pampilhosa - Guarda - Vilar Formoso) on 19 April 2022 for an estimated 9 months for a €550m modernisation programme. However services are still suspended as at December 2023. The priority was to increase the capacity for freight traffic, allowing the operation of 750m long trains rather than the existing 400m. This includes the new 3.2 km Concordância da Mealhada at Pampilhosa to allow direct access to the Porto area.

The Covilhã - Guarda section of the Beira Baixa line reopened to passengers on 2 May 2021, having been used for the first time by a freight train on 18 April, following electrification. Passenger services had ceased from 9 March 2009. This included the new 1.5 km Concordância das Beiras curve, avoiding Guarda.

Electrification of the final section of the Minho line, from Viana do Castelo to Valença, was officially inaugurated on 29 April 2021.

The RENFE combined Sud Express and Lusitania Trenhotel to/from Lisboa was suspended on 17 March 2020, following the national lockdown in Spain, and never reinstated. This was the only passenger train across the border between Vilar Formoso and Fuentes de Oñoro.

Future Changes

Agreement has been reached to restore services on the (Porto -) Contumil - Leixões line. Services were reinstated in 2009 but suspended in 2011 because of low patronage, probably caused by their running to the inconvenient main line station of Ermesinde. The Contumil - Leça do Balio section is expected to begin running in 2024. Studies will be undertaken for the second phase to Leixões,

In late 2022 the government announced plans for a high speed ​​line between Lisboa Oriente and Porto Campanhã, with a €1bn contribution from the EU. This is a resurrection of the plan from 2005 which was a victim of the 2008 financial crash. The total length is 290 km. It is designed for operation at up to 300 km/h and will be 1668 mm gauge. This development is driven mainly by capacity constraints on the existing line. This is used in whole or in part by about 50% of all CP passenger services and 90% of all freight. It is to be delivered in three phases.

  • The first phase covers the 143 km between Porto and Soure and is expected to cost around €3·7bn, of which €729m will come from the EU’s Connecting Europe Facility. It is divided into two lots: the 71 km between Porto and Oiã is estimated at €1·9bn and IP invited tenders for this work in January 2024. Tthe 72 km between Aveiro and Soure is estimated at at €1·7bn. The line would serve Porto’s Vila Nova de Gaia district with an underground station in Santo Ovídio, which will be served by the Metro do Porto light rail network. An additional road and rail bridge would be built between Porto and Gaia. Aveiro and Coimbra stations on the existing north-south main line would be redeveloped to enable high speed services to call; the plans envisage construction of a 17 km link from Aveiro to meet the new alignment at Canelas. Under current plans, the first section would be completed by 2028, reducing the travel time between Porto and Lisboa from 2h 50m to less than 2h.
  • The second phase, between Soure and Carregado near Lisboa, has an estimated cost of €1·5bn, with completion scheduled for the end of 2030. This element of the scheme would include quadrupling of the existing line between Castanheira do Ribatejo and Alverca.
  • The third phase, between Carregado and Lisboa, would be developed after 2030, reducing the Porto – Lisboa journey time to 1 h 15 min. The cost is estimated at €4·5bn.

In early February 2022 tenders were invited for the reconstruction of the 30 km metre gauge line between Oliveira de Azeméis and Sernada do Vouga. Work costing €4·9m should have been completed by the end of 2023, but has been delayed by 4 years.

Work to electrify Faro – Vila Real de Santo António started in November 2021. It was planned to be completed in October 2023 but work was still in progress in April 2024. Work on the Tunes – Lagos line was supposed to start in the second quarter of 2022 with completion planned by the end of 2024 but no firm information on the progress is available.

In September 2020 it was announced that the former Estoril Railway from Lisboa Cais do Sodré to Cascais was to be converted from 1500V DC to 25kV 50 Hz by the end of 2023. As at April 2024 no information is available.

In April 2020 the EU announced funding for expansion of the Metro do Porto: a new Line G from São Bento north west to Casa da Música and an extension of Line D from Santo Ovídio south east to Vila D’Este.

The long promised new freight line [South International Corridor] connecting the ports of Sines, [with connections from Setúbal and Lisboa] to Caia on the Spanish border near Badajoz is moving forward. The 79∙4 km new line between Évora and a triangular junction east of Elvas, which has gauge-convertible sleepers, is almost complete. It is possible a passenger service may start in early 2024. The route will be electrified at 25 kV 50 Hz.

The governmental 'strategic infrastructure plan' in preparation in summer 2018 contained no investment for the Casa Branca - Beja or Régua - Pocinho lines. They may therefore be in danger of closure, especially the latter which is not in good condition. The 2020 plan envisages the Douro line being electrified to Régua by 2025.

Older Changes

For details of older changes prior to 2019 see Portugal - Older General Information.

Special Notes

Cascais (Estoril Railway) is now almost certainly the westernmost railhead in Europe (Valentia Harbour in Ireland held that honour until closure in 1960).

Timetable direction contains a trap for the unwary: circulaçoes ascendentes (which one might translate as "up trains") are travelling away from the major terminal (and thus the opposite of most British practice); such trains carry odd numbers (equivalent of French impair).

Ramal = branch line; conc. (concordancia) = chord or connection; ap. (apeadeiro) = halt; bif. (bifurcação) = junction.

See also