The Little Mermaid by Edvard Eriksen. Unveiled in Churchill Park in 1913, now a symbol of Copenhagen. |
London to Denmark by train
It's easy to travel from the UK to Denmark by train. Take Eurostar and onward trains from London to Brussels, Cologne or Hamburg, stay overnight, then travel from Brussels, Cologne or Hamburg to Copenhagen next morning. Or sail overnight to Holland and catch a train from Amsterdam to Copenhagen, A great alternative to an easily avoidable flight, the journey becomes part of the holiday. This page explains routes, trains, fares & how to buy tickets.
London to Copenhagen & Denmark by Eurostar
London to Copenhagen by ferry from Harwich
UK to Copenhagen by ferry from Newcastle or Hull
International trains to & from Copenhagen
Trains from Copenhagen to other European cities
Trains from other European cities to Copenhagen
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Other useful information
Useful country information: currency, dial code...
About the Hamburg-Copenhagen trains
How to book trains within Denmark using dsb.dk
General European train travel information
Luggage Taking bikes Taking your dog
Travel insurance, mobile data, VPN & other tips
Interactive map: Click a route
Useful country information
Option 1, London to Kolding, Odense & Copenhagen by train
You can travel from London to Copenhagen by Eurostar and comfortable air-conditioned trains, leaving day 1 and arriving day 2, with an overnight hotel stop in either Brussels, Cologne or Hamburg. By all means stop at one city on the outward and another on your way back. Incidentally, the Hamburg-Copenhagen trains no longer use the Puttgarden-Rødby train ferry, since December 2019 they've been routed the longer way round through Kolding & Odense and the Great Belt Fixed Link.
London ► Copenhagen, overnight in Brussels
This is the most time-effective option, leaving central London in the evening after a full working day, arriving in Copenhagen in the evening next day.
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Day 1, travel from London to Brussels on any Eurostar you like, check times at www.eurostar.com.
The last Eurostar leaves London St Pancras at 19:34 arriving Brussels Midi 22:38.
Eurostar has a cafe-bar, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. Plus & Premier fares include a meal with wine.
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Stay overnight in Brussels. I recommend the Pullman Hotel Brussels Midi on the station itself, or the Ibis Brussels Midi across the road.
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Day 2, travel from Brussels to Copenhagen by train in a single day, with a choice of two departures:
Leave Brussels Midi at 06:22, change Cologne Hbf & Hamburg Hbf, arriving Kolding (for Legoland) 17:44, Odense 18:23, Copenhagen 19:38.
Leave Brussels Midi at 08:25, change Cologne Hbf & Hamburg Hbf, arriving Kolding (for Legoland) 19:44, Odense 20:23, Copenhagen 21:38.
This is a straightforward journey all on one Brussels-Copenhagen ticket booked at int.bahn.de.
You travel from Brussels to Cologne by ICE3neo and Cologne to Hamburg by ICE4, with restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. Then from Hamburg to Copenhagen by EuroCity train with free WiFi in Denmark, and refreshments.
London ► Copenhagen, overnight in Cologne
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Day 1, travel from London to Cologne by train, with a choice of departures:
Leave London St Pancras at 13:01, change Brussels Midi, arriving Cologne Hbf 18:15.
Leave London St Pancras at 15:04, change Brussels Midi, arriving Cologne Hbf 20:15.
There are earlier departures if you'd like to spend time in Cologne, see the London-Cologne timetable here.
You travel from London to Brussels by Eurostar with a cafe-bar, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. Plus & Premier fares include a meal with wine. Then Brussels to Cologne by ICE3neo with a restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi.
For dinner I recommend the Brauhaus Sion, 5 minutes walk from the station.
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Stay overnight in Cologne. The good & inexpensive Ibis Hotel Köln-am-Dom is ideal as it's part of Cologne Hbf, the entrance is left of the station entrance, many rooms have a cathedral view. Other hotels near the station with good reviews are the Breslauer Hof Am Dom, Hotel Domspitzen, CityClass Hotel Europa am Dom, Hilton Cologne, Excelsior Hotel Ernst am Dom.
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Day 2, travel from Cologne to Copenhagen by train, with a choice of departures:
Leave Cologne Hbf at 06:15, change at Hamburg Hbf, arriving Kolding (for Legoland) 13:44, Odense 14:23 & Copenhagen 15:38.
Leave Cologne Hbf at 08:11, change at Hamburg Hbf, arriving Kolding (for Legoland) 15:44, Odense 16:23 & Copenhagen 17:38.
Leave Cologne Hbf at 10:11, change at Hamburg Hbf, arriving Kolding (for Legoland) 17:44, Odense 18:23 & Copenhagen 19:38.
You travel from Cologne to Hamburg by ICE4 with restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi, then Hamburg to Copenhagen by EuroCity train with free WiFi in Denmark, refreshments available. Check times at int.bahn.de.
London ► Copenhagen, overnight in Hamburg
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Day 1, travel from London to Hamburg by train, with a choice of departures:
Leave London St Pancras at 09:01, change Brussels Midi & Cologne Hbf, arriving Hamburg Hbf 19:14.
Leave London St Pancras at 11:04, change Brussels Midi & Cologne Hbf, arriving Hamburg Hbf 21:14.
You travel from London to Brussels by Eurostar with cafe-bar, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi, then Brussels to Cologne by superb ICE3neo and Cologne to Hamburg by ICE4, with restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. See the London-Hamburg timetable here.
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Stay overnight in Hamburg. The Hotel Reichshof Hamburg is the top choice here, just across the road 100m from the station's Kirchenallee exit, with art deco-based design and great reviews. Other hotels near Hamburg Hbf with good or great reviews include (starting with the cheapest) the Hotel Continental Novum, Hotel Furst Bismarck, Hotel Europaischer Hof, Hotel Atlantic Kempinski. If you're on a budget, cheap private rooms in the A&O Hotel near Hamburg Hbf can be booked at www.hostelworld.com. Or try the innovative Cab20 capsule hotel, a 550m 6-minute walk from the station, see walking map.
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Day 2, travel from Hamburg to Copenhagen by EuroCity train:
Leave Hamburg Hbf at 08:50, arriving Kolding (for Legoland) at 11:44, Odense at 12:23 & Copenhagen 13:38.
Or there are later trains, see the timetable here. The EuroCity train has free WiFi in Denmark & refreshments.
Copenhagen ► London overnight in Brussels
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Day 1, travel from Copenhagen to Brussels by train, with a choice of two departures:
Leave Copenhagen at 06:22, Odense 07:35 or Kolding (for Legoland) 08:15, change Hamburg Hbf & Cologne Hbf, arriving Brussels Midi 19:35.
Leave Copenhagen at 08:22, Odense 09:35 or Kolding (for Legoland) 10:15, change Hamburg Hbf & Cologne Hbf, arriving Brussels Midi 21:35.
This can all be done all on one Copenhagen-Brussels through ticket booked at int.bahn.de.
You travel from Copenhagen to Hamburg by EuroCity train with refreshment trolley, free WiFi when in Denmark. Then from Hamburg to Cologne by ICE4, Cologne to Brussels by ICE3neo, with restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi.
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Stay overnight in Brussels. I recommend the Pullman Hotel Brussels Midi on the station itself, or the Ibis Brussels Midi across the road.
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Day 2, travel from, Brussels to London on any morning Eurostar you like, check times at www.eurostar.com.
The first train leaves Brussels Midi at 07:56 on Mondays-Saturdays arriving London St Pancras 08:59.
On Sundays the first train leaves Brussels Midi at 08:52, arriving London St Pancras 09:57.
Eurostar has a cafe-bar, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. Plus & Premier fares include breakfast.
Copenhagen ► London, overnight in Cologne
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Day 1, travel from Copenhagen to Cologne with a choice of departures:
Leave Copenhagen at 10:22, Odense 11:35 or Kolding (for Legoland) 12:15, change at Hamburg Hbf, arriving Cologne Hbf 19:47.
Leave Copenhagen at 12:07, Odense 13:35 or Kolding (for Legoland) 14:15, change at Hamburg Hbf, arriving Cologne Hbf 21:49.
The 12:07 runs from 12 April 2025 onwards. There's also an 08:22 departure if you'd like time for dinner in Cologne, I recommend the Brauhaus Sion, 5 minutes walk from the station. There's a 14:22 departure, but with no wiggle room if there's a delay. Check times at int.bahn.de.
You travel from Copenhagen to Hamburg by EuroCity train with refreshment trolley and free WiFi when in Denmark. Then from Hamburg to Cologne by ICE4 with restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi.
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Stay overnight in Cologne. The good & inexpensive Ibis Hotel Köln-am-Dom is ideal as it's part of Cologne Hbf with an entrance to the left of the station entrance - many of its rooms have a cathedral view. Also near the station with good reviews are the Breslauer Hof Am Dom, Hotel Domspitzen, CityClass Hotel Europa am Dom, Hilton Cologne, Excelsior Hotel Ernst am Dom.
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Day 2, travel from Cologne to London by train, with a choice of departures:
Leave Cologne Hbf by ICE at 07:42, change at Brussels Midi onto Eurostar arriving London St Pancras 11:57.
Leave Cologne Hbf by ICE at 09:42, change at Brussels Midi onto Eurostar arriving London St Pancras 13:57.
Or there are later departures, see the timetable here.
ICE trains have a restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. Eurostar has a cafe-bar, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. Plus & Premier fares include a meal with wine.
Copenhagen ► London, overnight in Hamburg
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Day 1, travel from Copenhagen to Hamburg on any train you like, see the timetable here.
Leave Copenhagen by EuroCity train at 14:22, Odense 15:35 or Kolding (for Legoland) 16:15, arriving Hamburg Hbf 19:00.
Leave Copenhagen by EuroCity train at 16:22, Odense 17:35 or Kolding (for Legoland) 18:15, arriving Hamburg Hbf 20:59.
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Stay overnight in Hamburg. The Hotel Reichshof Hamburg is the top choice here, just across the road 100m from the station's Kirchenallee exit, with art deco-based design and great reviews. Other hotels near Hamburg Hbf with good or great reviews include (starting with the cheapest) the Hotel Continental Novum, Hotel Furst Bismarck, Hotel Europaischer Hof, Hotel Atlantic Kempinski. If you're on a budget, cheap private rooms in the A&O Hotel near Hamburg Hbf can be booked at www.hostelworld.com. Or try the innovative Cab20 capsule hotel, a 550m 6-minute walk from the station, see walking map.
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Day 2, travel from Hamburg to London by train, with a choice of departures:
Leave Hamburg Hbf at 06:46, change Cologne Hbf & Brussels Midi, arriving London St Pancras 15:57.
Leave Hamburg Hbf at 08:45, change Cologne Hbf & Brussels Midi, arriving London St Pancras 17:57.
Leave Hamburg Hbf at 10:46, change Cologne Hbf & Brussels Midi, arriving London St Pancras 19:57.
You travel from Hamburg to Cologne by ICE4 and Cologne to Brussels by ICE3, with restaurant, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. Then Brussels to London by Eurostar, with cafe-bar, power sockets & free WiFi. Plus & Premier fares include a meal with wine. See the Hamburg to London timetable here.
How much does it cost?
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London to Brussels by Eurostar starts at £52 one-way or £78 return in Standard, £97 one-way, £140 return in Plus (1st class).
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Brussels to Copenhagen starts at €39.99 in 2nd class or €79.99 in 1st class, each way.
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Fares vary like air fares, so book ahead.
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If making a round trip at short notice when regular fares exceed €170 each way, consider using an Interrail pass as explained here.
How to buy tickets
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Buy tickets at www.raileurope.com.
This lets you to book all your tickets together in one place, in plain English, in €, £ or $, international credit cards accepted, small booking fee.
First book your ticket from London to wherever you plan to stay overnight (Brussels, Cologne or Hamburg). Book this as a round trip if you're returning, because Eurostar return fares are cheaper than two one-ways. Add to your basket.
Then book your trains from the overnight stopping point to Copenhagen one-way for the following day, add to basket, and (if returning) book from Copenhagen to the overnight stopping point one-way, add this to your basket and check out.
You print your own tickets, or after booking you can load the Eurostar ticket into the Eurostar app, and show the DB ticket on your phone.
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When does booking open?
Booking for Eurostar opens up to 11 months ahead. Onward trains from Brussels to Germany & Denmark open up to 6 months ahead, less when the mid-December timetable change intervenes. I recommend waiting until all your trains are open for booking before buying a non-refundable Eurostar ticket. More about when booking opens.
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Booking tips
Fares vary like air fares, so book ahead for the cheapest prices and avoid busy days such as Fridays or Sundays.
After booking you can use the Eurostar's Manage your booking link to choose a better seat on Eurostar.
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Is it a through ticket?
No, as there are no through tickets from London to Germany. But www.raileurope.com will seamlessly sell you a Eurostar ticket from London to Brussels plus an onward German Railways ticket from Brussels to Germany, and on to Copenhagen.
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Seat reservations
A seat reservation is included with every ticket on Eurostar. Seat reservations on German trains are usually optional, you can add a reserved seat during booking for €5.20 2nd class or €6.50 in 1st class, each way. A reserved seat is a good idea so I'd add one when prompted.
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About those tight 20-minute connections at Brussels Midi
The slick 20-minute connection in Brussels between Eurostar and an onward ICE, sometimes less than this, is usually a recognised connection which lots of people make. It's not usually a problem, especially if you use the Brussels Midi short cut between platforms.
Even though the system sells you separate tickets either side of Brussels, you are protected by the Railteam Promise/HOTNAT so if there's a delay and you miss the connection you will be allowed to travel on later onwards trains at no extra charge.
Alternatively, nothing stops you booking an earlier Eurostar than the one which directly connects with your chosen onward ICE, if it has cheaper fares or if you want a more robust connection. To do this using www.raileurope.com, click More options, then enter Brussels (any station) as a via station with a stopover duration of (say) 1 or 2 hours. There are plenty of places for a meal, coffee or beer between trains in Brussels!
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If you're starting from another UK town or city, see advice on buying tickets to connect with Eurostar.
Another way to buy tickets
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This is more work as it involves two websites, but it can be a bit cheaper for two reasons: First, you don't pay any booking fee. Second, you can use the Stopovers feature at int.bahn.de to book a Brussels to Copenhagen through ticket, either done all in one day or with an overnight stop in Cologne or Hamburg programmed in. This is cheaper than buying separate Brussels to Germany & Germany to Copenhagen tickets.
Another advantage of booking with int.bahn.de is that you can select an exact seat on many German trains from a seating plan.
Do a dry run on both sites first to check availability. Also check that your outward Eurostar + ICE are a recognised connection by checking they appear together when you run a London to Cologne enquiry at int.bahn.de, read the paragraph above about the 20-minute connection in Brussels.
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Step 1, book the Eurostar from London to Brussels (and back, if returning) at www.eurostar.com.
It's easy enough to identify the Eurostars you need from the times above, using the departure and arrival times in London.
Eurostar return fares are cheaper than two one-ways, so if you're returning, book this as a round trip. You print your own ticket or load it into the Eurostar app to show on your phone. After booking you can use Eurostar's Manage your booking link to choose a better seat on Eurostar.
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Step 2, book from Brussels to Copenhagen at the German Railways website int.bahn.de.
If you're overnighting in Brussels, Brussels-Copenhagen can be done in a day. The tip here is to click Stopovers and enter Brussel Noord as a stopover point with length of stay left as zero. Why? You only get a cheap DB through ticket from Brussels to Copenhagen if the planner finds journeys using a DB-run ICE train between Brussels & Cologne. These call at Brussel Noord, the competing Eurostar (formerly Thalys) trains don't.
If you are staying overnight in Cologne or Hamburg, click Stopovers, enter Brussel Noord as stopover 1 with length of stay zero and either Cologne Hbf or Hamburg Hbf as stopover 2 with a length of stay of (say) 12 hours. You'll need to fiddle with the departure time and length of stay to get the trains you want either side of Cologne/Hamburg, it takes a bit of trial and error, which is why it's easier booking one way first, then if you're returning, book the return journey separately as another one-way. On German trains that makes no difference to the price.
This will get you a Brussels to Copenhagen through ticket with an overnight stop in Cologne or Hamburg included, which is what you want. If you have problems, by all means just book Brussels-Germany and Germany-Copenhagen separately.
You print your own ticket or can show it on your phone. I recommend registering when prompted so you can log in and check your bookings or re-print tickets at any time.
Using an Interrail pass
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Pass or point to point?
Let's be clear, a pass will not save money over the cheapest point-to-point advance-purchase fares you might see if you book a few months ahead. But when point-to-point fares are expensive (for example, at short notice) OR you want the flexibility to change your mind, re-route or reschedule as necessary, a pass might be what you need.
If flexibility is what you want, buy the pass. If it's about saving money, you'll have to check point-to-point prices and do the maths.
It's worth doing the maths if you are under 28, if you have kids (kids get a free pass when accompanying an adult but still need to pay reservation fees) or if you live a long way from London (as a pass covers you from your home station to London). Passes are available in 1st & 2nd class.
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How to use a pass for a trip to Denmark
Step 1, buy a 4-days in 1-month Interrail pass from www.raileurope.com (click Rail passes and select Europe) or www.interrail.eu, see pass prices on the Interrail page. You load the pass into the Railplanner app on your phone.
A 4-day pass is enough to get from most places in mainland Britain to almost anywhere in Denmark & back again.
A 4-day pass gives you unlimited train travel on any 4 dates you choose in an overall 1 month period. The first travel day can be any date you select in the 11 months after buying the pass, the overall 1 month period starts from that date. Learn about how Interrail passes work here.
Step 2, make a Eurostar passholder reservation from London to Brussels & back for €30 each way. See prices & how to make Eurostar passholder reservations online. Tip: Eurostar passholder availability is limited, so check availability before buying a pass.
Step 3, reservations between Brussels and Hamburg are optional, you can sit in any empty unreserved seat and show your pass when asked. But it's a good idea to reserve seats, do this for around €5 each way at int.bahn.de by entering Brussels to Hamburg and clicking the Book seat only link under the red search button.
Step 4, seat reservation between Hamburg & Copenhagen is optional most of the time but compulsory in summer (June-September). You can make Hamburg to Copenhagen reservations using the Danish Railways website as shown here.
Have your trip arranged as a package
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Railbookers are a train travel specialist who can put together a tour or short break for you as a package, including rail travel, hotels & transfers. On their website you'll find a range of suggested tours & holidays by rail which can be customised to your own requirements. And as you're booking a package, they'll take care of you if anything happens such as a strike or delay.
UK 0207 864 4600, www.railbookers.co.uk
US free 1-888-829-4775, see website
Canada 1-855-882-2910, see website
Australia 1300 971 526, see website
New Zealand 0800 000 554 or see website
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Byway (Byway.travel) is a UK-based eco-holiday firm with a 5-star TrustPilot rating. If you're nervous about booking train travel yourself, book a one-way or return UK-Denmark trip through Byway as a package, including hotels and starting from any British station you like. Byway includes package protection, a 100% Covid refund guarantee, free disruption and re-planning and on-demand WhatsApp support while you're away.
They can build a trip to your requirements if you phone 0300 131 7173 (open 09:00-17:00 Monday-Friday, from outside the UK call +44 300 131 7173) or email them or use this contact form. Please say you heard about them from Seat 61
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How to buy tickets by phone
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It's better to book online to avoid phone booking fees and see for yourself which trains are cheapest. Most agencies only work weekday office hours, you can book online 24/7. But if you want to book by phone, see my list of UK-based ticketing agencies.
What's the journey like?
1. London to Brussels by Eurostar
Eurostar trains link London & Brussels in just 2 hours, travelling at up to 300 km/h (186 mph). There are two bar cars, power sockets at all seats and free WiFi. Plus and Premier fares include a light meal with wine (or breakfast, on departures before 11:00). There's a 30-minute minimum check-in as all border formalities are carried out before you board the train. More about Eurostar & check-in procedure. St Pancras station guide. Brussels Midi station guide & short cut for changing trains in Brussels.
2. Brussels to Cologne by ICE3
Germany's superb ICEs have a restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. In 1st class, food & drink orders are taken at your seat. 50 minutes after leaving Brussels the ICE calls at Liège, where you can admire the impressive station designed by celebrity architect Santiago Calatrava. As you approach Cologne Hbf you'll see the twin towers of Cologne Cathedral on the right, next to the station. More about ICE3 trains. Brussels Midi station guide. Cologne Hbf station guide.
An ICE3neo at Brussels Midi with restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. More about ICE trains. Photo above courtesy of Christian Hunt.
3. Cologne to Hamburg by ICE4
ICE4s have a restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi, and are capable of 265 km/h (165 mph). Immediately after leaving Cologne Hbf, Cologne-Hamburg trains cross the Hohenzollern bridge over the Rhine, then pass through the industrial Ruhr. More about ICE trains. Hamburg Hbf station guide.
4. Hamburg to Copenhagen by EuroCity train
As from June 2023, Hamburg-Copenhagen trains are operated by former German Railways intercity cars like this, now shown in the timetable as EC for EuroCity. This is only temporary, as brand-new trains being built for DSB will be delivered in 2024. These ex-DB intercity cars have power sockets at all seats (although no WiFi). There's no catering car, so bring your own food & drink. More about the Hamburg to Copenhagen journey.
On 17 June 2023, the first Copenhagen to Hamburg train to use the 'new' German intercity cars is boarding at Copenhagen. Photo courtesy of Peter Kincey.
2nd class seats in are almost all open-plan like this. There are a handful of 6-seat 2nd class compartments in one of the coaches.
The 1st class car has 6-seater compartments like this. Larger photo. Larger photo.
Crossing the Little Belt (Lillebælt in Danish) from Jutland (mainland Denmark) to Funen, the island on which Odense is located.
There are no longer any direct ferries from the UK to Denmark. DFDS axed its 140-year-old route from Harwich to Esbjerg in September 2014. However, Stena Line's Harwich-Hoek van Holland route makes a useful alternative to Eurostar, with daily departures, inexpensive fares, quality private cabins with shower, toilet & satellite TV. It's shown in orange on the route map above.
This is a good option if you need to travel at short notice when Eurostar is expensive, if you live in East Anglia, or if you want to avoid the Channel Tunnel. Indeed, you may prefer this relaxing journey to the faster Eurostar options, cruising overnight to Holland on the Stena Line superferry in a luxury en suite cabin with shower, toilet & satellite TV (see the video), then travelling by daytime train to Copenhagen next day. Why not stop off in Amsterdam on the way?
London, Cambridge, Harwich ► Copenhagen
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Day 1, travel from London to Amsterdam overnight, see the Stena Line Rail & Sail page for full details.
You leave London Liverpool Street at 19:36 Mondays-Fridays, 19:04 Saturdays or 20:00 Sundays by direct train to Harwich International.
Or leave Cambridge at 19:47 Mondays-Saturdays or 19:45 on Sundays by direct train to Harwich International.
The Rail & Sail fare is valid from any Greater Anglia station, for example Norwich, Cambridge, Romford, Ilford, Ipswich.
At Harwich, the station is right next to the ferry terminal and you walk off the train into the terminal, check in at the Stena Line desk and walk straight onto Stena Line's luxurious overnight superferry Stena Hollandica.
All passengers travel in cosy private cabins with toilet, shower & satellite TV. Comfort & Captains class cabins are also available, and there's free WiFi. You can board the ferry around 9pm, have a late dinner in the restaurant or Stena Plus lounge and settle into your cabin.
The ferry sails at 23:00 and arrives at Hoek van Holland at 08:00 Dutch time next morning.
On arrival at Hoek van Holland, the metro station is next to the ferry terminal. Walk down the gangway into the ferry terminal, through passport control, out of the terminal and across the road to the metro station.
Take the frequent metro train from Hoek van Holland Haven to Schiedam Centrum and a Dutch Intercity train from Schiedam Centrum to Amsterdam Centraal arriving 10:24.
At Amsterdam Centraal, have a coffee at the delightfully retro Cafe 1e Klas, give my regards to Elvis, the cockatoo on the bar.
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Day 2, travel from Amsterdam to Hamburg by train.
Leave Amsterdam Centraal at 12:00, change at Osnabrück, arriving Hamburg Hbf 17:14. Enjoy an evening in Hamburg.
From 12 April 2025 onwards you can reach Copenhagen the same day: A EuroCity train leaves Hamburg Hbf at 18:53, arriving Kolding (for Legoland) 21:44, Odense 22:23 & Copenhagen 23:46.
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Stay overnight in Hamburg. The Hotel Reichshof Hamburg is the top choice here, just across the road 100m from the station's Kirchenallee exit, with art deco-based design and great reviews. Other hotels near Hamburg Hbf with good or great reviews include (starting with the cheapest) the Hotel Continental Novum, Hotel Furst Bismarck, Hotel Europaischer Hof, Hotel Atlantic Kempinski. If you're on a budget, cheap private rooms in the A&O Hotel near Hamburg Hbf can be booked at www.hostelworld.com.
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Day 3, travel from Hamburg to Copenhagen by train.
A EuroCity train leaves Hamburg Hbf at 08:50 every day, arriving Kolding (for Legoland) 11:44, Odense 12:23 & Copenhagen 13:38.
If you prefer, there are later trains at 10:53, 12:53, 14:56 & 16:55, see the timetable & journey guide here.
Copenhagen ► Harwich, Cambridge, London
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Day 1, travel from Copenhagen to Hamburg by train.
Leave Copenhagen by EuroCity train at 16:22, Odense at 17:35 or Kolding (for Legoland) at 18:15 arriving Hamburg Hbf 20:59.
Or by all means book an earlier departure to have more time in Hamburg, see the timetable & journey guide here.
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Stay overnight in Hamburg. The Hotel Reichshof Hamburg is the top choice here, just across the road 100m from the station's Kirchenallee exit, with art deco-based design and great reviews. Other hotels near Hamburg Hbf with good or great reviews include (starting with the cheapest) the Hotel Continental Novum, Hotel Furst Bismarck, Hotel Europaischer Hof, Hotel Atlantic Kempinski. If you're on a budget, cheap private rooms in the A&O Hotel near Hamburg Hbf can be booked at www.hostelworld.com.
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Day 2, travel from Hamburg to Amsterdam on any suitable train, for example leaving Hamburg Hbf at 08:45, change at Osnabrück and arrive Amsterdam Centraal 13:59. Check times at int.bahn.de.
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Day 2, travel from Amsterdam to London overnight, see the Stena Line Rail & Sail page for full details.
You leave Amsterdam Centraal at 18:36 by Dutch intercity train to Schiedam Centrum and change onto the metro to Hoek van Holland Haven.
At Hoek, the metro station is next to the ferry terminal. Check in at the Stena Line desk at least 45 minutes before sailing time, then walk up the gangway onto the luxurious Stena Line superferry and sail overnight to Harwich.
All passengers travel in cosy private cabins with en suite toilet & shower & satellite TV. Comfort & Captains class cabins are also available, and there's free WiFi. You can board the ferry around 8pm, have dinner in the restaurant or Stena Plus lounge and settle into your cabin.
The ferry sails from Hoek van Holland at 22:00 and arrives at Harwich International at 06:30 next morning (day 3), UK time.
Day 3, take a train from Harwich to London Liverpool Street arriving around 08:54 or from Harwich to Cambridge, arriving 09:42 (10:39 Sundays).
How much does it cost?
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London or any Greater Anglia station to Hoek van Holland starts at £62 per person each way, plus cabin.
For details of fares & cabin costs, see the Stena Line Rail & Sail page.
Hoek to Schiedam by metro costs around €4. Schiedam to Amsterdam by train costs €17.20.
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Amsterdam to Copenhagen starts at €37.99 in 2nd class or €69.99 in 1st class. Fares vary like air fares, so book ahead.
How to buy tickets
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Step 1, buy a Stena Line Rail & Sail ticket from London to Hoek van Holland online as shown on the Stena Line Rail & Sail page.
Buy the onward metro & train ticket to Amsterdam as shown on that page.
Step 2, now go to the German Railways website int.bahn.de and book from Amsterdam to Copenhagen one way. Look in the search results for journeys only 2 changes. If you are returning, now book from Copenhagen to Amsterdam as a separate one-way journey, but as you want an overnight stop in Hamburg, click Stopovers and enter Hamburg with length of stay 12 hours. Again, look for a journey with just 2 changes which matches the times above.
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Remember that with a through ticket you're covered if there's a delay and you miss a connection, as explained here - you are entitled to onward travel by later trains at no extra charge, and if necessary, an overnight hotel.
How to buy tickets by phone
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To buy tickets for the train & ferry service from London to Hoek van Holland, call Stena Line on 08445 762 (UK only).
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You can book trains from the Netherlands to Copenhagen by phone with DB's (German Railways') English-speaking phone line on 00 49 (0)30 311 68 29 04, lines open 08:30-20:00 Monday-Friday, 09:00-13:00 weekends UK time, 1.5% fee for phone bookings.
What's the journey like?
Step 1, London to Amsterdam by train & ferry
A train takes you from London's Liverpool Street station directly to the ferry terminal at Harwich. You walk off the train, into the terminal, get your boarding card & cabin key at the Stena Line check-in desk and walk straight onto the overnight ferry to Hoek van Holland. The superferries Stena Britannica & Stena Hollandica are the largest ferries of their kind in the world. Have a late dinner in the restaurant, retire to bed in a private cabin with en suite toilet & shower and satellite TV. At Hoek van Holland, you walk off the ship, through passport control and straight onto the station for the frequent metro train to Schiedam & Rotterdam. Change at Schiedam Centrum for a Dutch Railways (NS) train to Amsterdam Centraal. The journey is explained in detail on the Stena Line Rail & Sail page. See the video.
The Stena Hollandica boarding at Harwich, a floating hotel with private cabins, restaurant, bar, lounges, shop & kennels.
Above left, a standard outside cabin. Larger photo. 360º photo. Above right, the Stena Plus lounge with complimentary red & white wine, tea, coffee & snacks.
Above left, the bar on 9 deck. Above right, a Captain's Class cabin with complimentary minibar, toilet & shower.
Step 2, Amsterdam to Osnabrück by Intercity train
You take a comfortable Intercity train from Amsterdam Centraal to Osnabrück. There are power sockets at all seats and a refreshment trolley.
...and Cologne to Hamburg by ICE4
You then take an ICE4 from Osnabrück to Hamburg Hbf, with restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. More about ICEs. Hamburg Hbf station guide.
...then Hamburg to Copenhagen by EuroCity train
As from June 2023, Hamburg-Copenhagen trains are operated by former German Railways intercity cars like this, now shown in the timetable as EC for EuroCity. This is only temporary, as brand-new trains being built for DSB will be delivered in 2024. These ex-DB intercity cars have power sockets at all seats (although no WiFi). There's no catering car, so bring your own food & drink. See more photos, tips & information about the Hamburg to Copenhagen journey.
On 17 June 2023, the first Copenhagen to Hamburg train to use the 'new' German intercity cars is boarding at Copenhagen. Photo courtesy of Peter Kincey.
2nd class seats in are almost all open-plan like this. There are a handful of 6-seat 2nd class compartments in one of the coaches.
The 1st class cars have 6-seat compartments like this. Larger photo. Larger photo.
Naturally, you can take a train up to London then travel to Denmark as described above. You can buy special connecting train tickets from most British stations to London International, see my advice on buying connecting train tickets to London. But DFDS Seaways (www.dfds.com) run an excellent overnight ferry from Newcastle to Amsterdam, and P&O Ferries (www.poferries.com) have an overnight ferry from Hull to Rotterdam, both with comfortable private en suite cabins. Take a train to Hamburg, stay overnight, then take a train to Copenhagen.
Scotland & the North ► Copenhagen
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Day 1, take a train to either Hull or Newcastle, whichever is most convenient for where you live.
In Hull, transfer to P&O ferry terminal and sail overnight from Hull to Rotterdam by P&O cruise ferry, with bus/train connection to Amsterdam Centraal. The ferry has bars, restaurants & cosy en suite cabins. For details, see the Hull-Rotterdam page.
In Newcastle, transfer to the DFDS ferry terminal at North Shields and sail overnight from Newcastle to Amsterdam by DFDS Seaways cruise ferry. The ferry has bars, restaurants & cosy en suite cabins. For details, see the Newcastle-Amsterdam page.
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Day 2, travel from Amsterdam or Rotterdam to Hamburg by train.
It's too tight to get all the way to Copenhagen after the arrival of the ferries, so an overnight in Hamburg is needed. Check times at int.bahn.de.
For example, leave Amsterdam Centraal at 12:00, change at Osnabrück, arriving Hamburg Hbf 17:14.
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Stay overnight in Hamburg.
The Hotel Reichshof Hamburg is the top choice here, just across the road 100m from the station's Kirchenallee exit, with art deco-based design and great reviews. Other hotels near Hamburg Hbf with good or great reviews include (starting with the cheapest) the Hotel Continental Novum, Hotel Furst Bismarck, Hotel Europaischer Hof, Hotel Atlantic Kempinski. If you're on a budget, cheap private rooms in the A&O Hotel near Hamburg Hbf can be booked at www.hostelworld.com.
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Day 3, travel from Hamburg to Copenhagen by train.
A EuroCity train leaves Hamburg Hbf at 08:50 every day, arriving Kolding (for Legoland) 11:44, Odense 12:23 & Copenhagen 13:38. If you prefer, there are later trains at 10:53, 12:53, 14:56 & 16:55, see the timetable & journey guide here.
Copenhagen ► Scotland & the North
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Day 1, travel from Copenhagen to Hamburg by train.
Leave Copenhagen by EuroCity train at 16:22, Odense at 17:35 or Kolding (for Legoland) at 18:15 arriving Hamburg Hbf 20:59.
Or book an earlier departure for more time in Hamburg, see the timetable & journey guide here.
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Stay overnight in Hamburg.
The Hotel Reichshof Hamburg is the top choice here, just across the road 100m from the station's Kirchenallee exit, with art deco-based design and great reviews. Other hotels near Hamburg Hbf with good or great reviews include (starting with the cheapest) the Hotel Continental Novum, Hotel Furst Bismarck, Hotel Europaischer Hof, Hotel Atlantic Kempinski. If you're on a budget, cheap private rooms in the A&O Hotel near Hamburg Hbf can be booked at www.hostelworld.com.
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Day 2, travel from Hamburg to Amsterdam by train, check times for your date of travel at int.bahn.de.
For example you can leave Hamburg Hbf at 08:45 by ICE, change at Osnabrück and arrive Amsterdam Centraal 13:59.
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Day 2, transfer to the ferry port & sail overnight to Hull or Newcastle.
Travel overnight by ferry from Rotterdam Europoort to Hull with P&O Ferries or IJmuiden (near Amsterdam) to Newcastle with DFDS, whichever is most convenient for you, arriving next morning (day 3). Transfer to the station and take a train home.
For full details, see the Hull-Rotterdam & Newcastle-Amsterdam pages.
Fares & how to buy tickets
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Step 1, book the Newcastle-Amsterdam ferry at www.dfds.com or the Hull-Rotterdam ferry at www.poferries.com.
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Step 2, buy train tickets from Amsterdam or Rotterdam to Copenhagen at the German Railways website int.bahn.de.
Amsterdam or Rotterdam to Copenhagen starts at €37.99 in 2nd class or €69.99 in 1st class.
To get the overnight stop in Hamburg, click Stopovers and enter Hamburg Hbf with a length of stay of (say) 14 hours.
You print your own ticket, or show it on your phone.
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Step 3, buy a train ticket from your local station to Newcastle or Hull at any train operator website, for example tfw.wales.
Allow plenty of time for the transfer from station to ferry terminal and for the ferry check-in.
What's the journey like?
Step 1, Newcastle to Amsterdam (DFDS) or Hull to Rotterdam (P&O) by overnight ferry, with private en suite cabins, restaurants, bars, cinema, a floating hotel. If travelling with DFDS from Newcastle, a transfer bus takes you from IJmuiden ferry terminal to Amsterdam Centraal station next morning. If travelling with P&O from Hull, a transfer bus takes you from Rotterdam Europoort ferry terminal to Rotterdam Centraal, from where frequent Dutch trains run to Utrecht or Amsterdam.
Step 2, Amsterdam to Osnabrück by Intercity train...
You take a comfortable Intercity train from Amsterdam Centraal to Osnabrück. There are power sockets at all seats and a refreshment trolley.
...and Cologne to Hamburg by ICE4
You then take an ICE4 from Osnabrück to Hamburg Hbf, with restaurant car, power sockets at all seats & free WiFi. More about ICEs. Hamburg Hbf station guide.
...then Hamburg to Copenhagen by EuroCity train
As from June 2023, Hamburg-Copenhagen trains are operated by former German Railways intercity cars like this, now shown in the timetable as EC for EuroCity. This is only temporary, as brand-new trains being built for DSB will be delivered in 2024. These ex-DB intercity cars have power sockets at all seats (although no WiFi). There's no catering car, so bring your own food & drink. More about the Hamburg to Copenhagen journey.
On 17 June 2023, the first Copenhagen to Hamburg train to use the 'new' German intercity cars is boarding at Copenhagen. Photo courtesy of Peter Kincey.
2nd class seats in are almost all open-plan like this. There are a handful of 6-seat 2nd class compartments in one of the coaches.
The 1st class car has 6-seater compartments like this. Larger photo. Larger photo.
London to Aarhus & Aalborg
London ► Aarhus, Aalborg
- Follow the London to Kolding instructions above, stopping overnight in either Brussels, Cologne or Hamburg.
- You simply change at Kolding for Aarhus & Aalborg,
Aalborg, Aarhus ► London
- Take a train from Aalborg or Aarhus to Kolding.
- Travel from Kolding to London as shown above, stopping overnight in either Brussels, Cologne or Hamburg.
How much does it cost?
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Costs are as per the journey to Copenhagen shown above.
How to buy tickets
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Buy tickets in the same way as for London to Copenhagen, but instead of booking from Brussels/Cologne/Hamburg to Copenhagen, book to Aarhus or Aalborg instead.
London to Legoland (www.legoland.dk)
The famous Legoland theme park, opened in 1968, is at Billund. There is no railway station at Billund, but there are buses from Vejle, Kolding & Fredericia.
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Coming from the UK, travel to Kolding as shown above. Bus 166 runs from Kolding bus station (just outside the station to the right) to Legoland in Billund every two hours through the day, taking 61 minutes, fare about 55 Kr (€7). You can check bus times & fares at www.rejseplanen.dk.
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Coming from Copenhagen, take an hourly fast Lyntog ('Lightning train') to Vejle for a bus to Legoland. Use the journey planner at int.bahn.de to find train times to Vejle. Then use www.rejseplanen.dk to find bus times from Vejle to Legoland. Buses run twice an hour throughout the day, journey time about 45 minutes, fare about 65Kr (£8) each way. In fact, www.rejseplanen.dk is a multi-modal journey planner and you can ask it for combined train & bus times all the way from Copenhagen to Legoland.
European Rail Timetable & maps
The European Rail Timetable (formerly the Thomas Cook European Timetable) has train & ferry times for every country in Europe plus currency & climate information. It is essential for regular European train travellers and an inspiration for armchair travellers. Published since 1873, it had just celebrated 140 years of publication when Thomas Cook decided to pull the plug on their entire publishing department, but the dedicated ex-Thomas Cook team set up a private venture and resumed publication of the famous European Rail Timetable in March 2014. You can buy it online at www.amazon.co.uk (UK addresses) or www.europeanrailtimetable.eu (shipping worldwide). More information on what the European Rail Timetable contains.
Rail Map Europe is the map I recommend, covering all of Europe from Portugal in the west to Moscow & Istanbul in the east, Finland in the north to Sicily & Athens in the south. Scenic routes & high-speed lines are highlighted. See an extract from the map. Buy online at www.europeanrailtimetable.eu (shipping worldwide) or at www.amazon.co.uk (UK addresses).
Hotels in Denmark
Suggested Copenhagen hotel: Axel Guldsmeden Hotel
The Axel Guldsmeden Hotel is a stone's throw from Copenhagen main station, so handy for arrivals and departures, and has been described as 'cool but not pretentious' by travellers - worth taking a look!
Backpacker hostels: www.hostelworld.com
www.hostelworld.com: If you're on a tight budget, don't forget about backpacker hostels. Hostelworld offers online booking of cheap private rooms or dorm beds in backpacker hostels in Paris and most other European cities at rock-bottom prices.
Travel insurance & other tips
Always take out travel insurance
You should take out travel insurance with at least £1m or preferably £5m medical cover from a reliable insurer. It should cover trip cancellation and loss of cash & belongings up to a reasonable limit. These days, check you're covered for covid-19-related issues, and use an insurer whose cover isn't invalidated by well-meant but excessive Foreign Office travel advice against non-essential travel. An annual policy is usually cheapest even for just 2 or 3 trips a year, I have an annual policy with Staysure.co.uk myself. Don't expect travel insurance to bail you out of every missed connection, see the advice on missed connections here. Here are some suggested insurers, I get a little commission if you buy through these links, feedback always welcome.
www.staysure.co.uk offers enhanced Covid-19 protection and gets 4.7 out of 5 on Trustpilot.
www.columbusdirect.com is also a well-know brand.
If you live in the USA try Travel Guard USA.
Get an eSIM with mobile data package
Don't rely on WiFi, download an eSIM with a European mobile data package and stay connected. Most newer mobile phones can download a virtual SIM including iPhone 11 & later, see device compatibility list. There's no need to buy a physical SIM card! Maya.net is a reliable eSIM data retailer with a 4.5 out of 5 Trustpilot rating and a range of packages including unlimited data.
Get a Curve card for foreign travel
Most banks give you a poor exchange rate then add a foreign transaction fee on top. A Curve MasterCard means no foreign transaction fees and gives you the mid-market exchange rate, at least up to a certain limit, £500 per month as I write this. The money you spend on your Curve card goes straight onto one of your existing debit or credit cards. And you can get a Curve card for free.
How it works: 1. Download the Curve app for iPhone or Android. 2. Enter your details & they'll send you a Curve MasterCard - they send to the UK and most European addresses. 3. Link your existing credit & debit cards to the app, you can link up to two cards with the free version of Curve, I link my normal debit card and my normal credit card. 4. Now use the Curve MasterCard to buy things online or in person or take cash from ATMs, exactly like a normal MasterCard. Curve does the currency conversion and puts the balance in your own currency onto whichever debit or credit card is currently selected in the Curve app. You can even change your mind about which card it goes onto, within 14 days of the transaction.
I have a Curve Blue card myself, it means I can buy a coffee on a foreign station on a card without being stung by fees and lousy exchange rates, just by tapping the Curve card on their card reader. The money goes through Curve to my normal debit card and is taken directly from my account (in fact I have the Curve card set up as payment card on Apple Pay on my iPhone, so can double-click my phone, let it do Face ID then tap the reader with the phone - even easier than getting a card out). I get a little commission if you sign up to Curve, but I recommend it here because I think it's great. See details, download the app and get a Curve card, they'll give you £5 cashback through that link.
Get a VPN for safe browsing. Why you need a VPN
When travelling you may use free public WiFi which is often insecure. A VPN encrypts your connection so it's always secure, even on unsecured WiFi. It also means you can select the geographic location of the IP address you browse with, to get around geoblocking which a surprising number of websites apply. See VPNs & why you need one explained. ExpressVPN is a best buy with a 4.7 out of 5 Trustpilot ranking which I use myself - I've signed up as an ExpressVPN affiliate, and if you go with expressvpn.com using this link you should see a special deal, 3 months free with an annual subscription. I also get some commission to help support this site.
Carry an Anker powerbank
Tickets, reservations, hotel bookings and Interrail or Eurail passes are often now held on your mobile phone. You daren't let it run out of power, and you can't always rely on the phone's internal battery or on being near a power outlet. I always carry an Anker powerbank which can recharge my phone several times over. Buy from Amazon.co.uk or buy from Amazon.com.
Touring cities? Use hill walking shoes!
One of the best things I've done is swap my normal shoes for hill-walking shoes, in my case from Scarpa. They're intended for hiking across the Pennines not wandering around Florence, but the support and cushioning for hiking works equally well when you're on your feet all day exploring foreign cities. My feet used to give out first and limit my day, now the rest of me gives up before they do!