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How to travel by train from

London to Poland . . .

How to travel by train from the UK to Warsaw, Krakow & Poland...

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Train operator in Poland:

PKP (Polskie Koleje Panstwowe), www.pkp.com.pl.  For express trains within & from Poland see www.intercity.com.plTo book train tickets within & starting in Poland, try ticket agency www.polrail.com.   Eurostar times & fares    All-Europe online train times

 

 

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Page last updated:

23 June 2010.  Train times valid from 13 June to 11 December 2010.


 Travelling to Poland by train...

  Cathedral & main square, Krakow, Poland.  Easy to reach by train from London..!

The main square & cathedral, Krakow

It's easy to travel from the UK to Poland by train.  You take a lunchtime Eurostar to Brussels and a high-speed train to Cologne, then the overnight sleeper train 'Jan Kiepura' from Cologne to Warsaw with connections for Krakow.  Alternatively, take a mid-afternoon Eurostar to Paris, the excellent sleeper 'Perseus' train from Paris to Berlin, then an air-conditioned express from Berlin to Warsaw, Krakow, Poznan, Wroclaw or Katowice.  The journey from London to Warsaw or Krakow is safe and comfortable, with couchettes and sleeping-cars for the overnight part.  An experience in itself!

On this page...

London to Poznan & Warsaw: train times, fares & how to buy tickets

London to Wroclaw, Katowice, Krakow & Oswiecim (Auschwitz): times, fares, how to buy tickets

Scotland, north of England & East Anglia to Poland

Buying train tickets within Poland

Hotels & accommodation in Poland

Holidays to Poland by train not plane

On other pages...

Buying connecting train tickets from other UK towns & cities

Scotland & North of England to Poland avoiding London

Taking bikes   Dogs   Luggage   General info

Sponsored links:

 


 London to Poznan & Warsaw

There are two good options for travelling from London to Warsaw by train.  Option 1 is to leave London at lunchtime, change in Brussels & Cologne onto the 'Jan Kiepura' sleeper train to Warsaw arriving next morning.  Option 2 is to leave London in mid-afternoon, take the City Night Line sleeper train from Paris to Berlin and then a daytime 'Berlin-Warszawa Express' to Warsaw arriving early evening.  Both options are described below.

Option 1:  London to Warsaw by Jan Kiepura sleeper train...

This is the fastest & most convenient option between London & Warsaw.

Train times London ► Warsaw

  • Travel from London to Brussels by Eurostar.  On Mondays-Thursdays & Saturdays, leave London St Pancras at 12:57 arriving Brussels Midi at 16:03.  On Fridays & Sundays leave London St Pancras at 14:34 arriving in Brussels Midi at 17:33.

  • Travel from Brussels to Cologne by high-speed train.  On Mondays to Thursdays & Saturdays, leave Brussels Midi at 16:28 by Thalys train arriving in Cologne at 18:15.  On Fridays & Sundays leave Brussels Midi by ICE train at 18:25, arriving Cologne at 20:15.

  •   You've time for a meal in Cologne.
  • Travel from Cologne to Warsaw overnight on the 'Jan Kiepura' EuroNight sleeper train, leaving Cologne at 22:28 and arriving next morning at Poznan at 07:32 and Warsaw Centralna at 10:24.  The Jan Kiepura has modern air-conditioned Polish sleeping-cars (1 & 2-bed deluxe rooms with private toilet & shower plus TV/DVD player, 1, 2 & 3-berth standard rooms with washbasin, hot shower at end of the corridor, CCTV security, highly recommended), couchettes (basic sleeping accommodation in 4-berth & 6-berth compartments) & reclining seats (not recommended).  The sleeper fare includes complimentary toiletries pack and morning tea or coffee and croissant.  There's no restaurant car in the evening, so feel free to take you own picnic and bottle of wine aboard, but a restaurant car is attached for breakfast.

Train times Warsaw ► London

  • Travel from Warsaw to Cologne on the 'Jan Kiepura' sleeper train, leaving Warsaw Centralna at 18:10 or Poznan at 21:18, arriving in Cologne at 06:14 next morning.  The Jan Kiepura has modern sleeping-cars (1, 2 & 3-bed standard rooms with washbasin, 1 & 2-bed deluxe rooms with private shower & toilet, highly recommended), couchettes (basic sleeping accommodation in 4-berth & 6-berth compartments) and reclining seats (not recommended).  There's a restaurant car in the evening for dinner, with waiter-served meals at affordable prices, alternatively feel free to take you own picnic and bottle of wine aboard!

  • Travel from Cologne to Brussels by high-speed Thalys train, leaving Cologne daily at 07:45, arriving Brussels Midi at 09:32.

  • A Eurostar leaves Brussels Midi daily at 11:29 and arrives London St Pancras at 12:33.

Take Eurostar to Brussels, then a Thalys high-speed train to Cologne...

First class seats on a high-speed Thalys train. Second class on board a 'Thalys' high-speed train to Cologne
1st class (Confort 1) seats on Thalys.... 2nd class (Confort 2) seats on Thalys A Thalys at Brussels.  More Thalys info.

... and introducing the Jan Kiepura sleeper train from Cologne to Warsaw...

A sleeping-car on the Jan Kiepura sleeper train from Cologne to Warsaw   3-berth sleeper (standard type) on the Jan Kiepura   3-berth sleeper on the Jan Kiepura, beds folded away

1, 2 or 3 bed sleepers, the cosy & civilised option.  The EuroNight 'Jan Kiepura' has two modern air-conditioned Polish sleeping-cars, with 1, 2 & 3 bed compartments, either deluxe with shower & toilet or standard with washbasin. 

 

3-bed sleeper with beds folded out...  Photo courtesy of Tobias Köhler.

 

3-bed sleeper with beds folded away.  Photo courtesy of Tobias Köhler

4-berth couchettes on the Jan Kiepura sleeper train to Warsaw

4-berth couchettes:  Ideal for families.  Much more space per person than 6-berth couchettes.

    6-berth couchettes on the Jan Kiepura sleeper train to Warsaw

6-berth couchettes:  A very economical option, far better than a seat for just a few euros more...

    A couchette car on the Jan Kiepura overnight train to Warsaw

Couchette cars, the economy option.  The Jan Kiepura also has two couchette cars, with 4 & 6 berth compartments, toilets & washrooms at the end of the corridor.  Don't book a seat, always book a couchette.

How much does it cost (by Jan Kiepura sleeper train)?

1. London to Cologne

by Eurostar+Thalys:

 Fares start at £97 return (£69 London-Brussels + £28 Brussels-Cologne)

 or £53 one-way (£39 London-Brussels + £14 Brussels-Cologne)

 Fares vary like air fares, so book in advance to get the cheapest prices.

 Child, youth & senior Eurostar fares

  
2. Cologne to Warsaw

by Jan Kiepura:

In a

seat

In a couchette In the sleeping-car Deluxe sleeper
6-berth 4-berth 3-berth 2-berth single 2-berth single
Savings fare one-way from: £24 £29 £36 £43 £52 £92 n/a n/a
Savings fare return from: £48 £58 £72 £86 £104 £184 n/a n/a
Normal one-way: £80 £84 £88 £96 £111 £199 £175 £221
Normal return: £160 £168 £176 £192 £222 £398 £350 £442
Youth one-way £56 £57 £61 £68 £80

£127

£131

£165

Senior one-way £65 £66 £70 £77 £89 £161 £148 £188

Savings fare = Special cheap fare, price varies, limited availability, no refunds or changes to travel plans. 

Normal fare = fully flexible, refundable, buy any time.  Youth = under 26, Senior = over 60.

How to buy tickets online...

Booking online is the cheapest way to buy tickets, with no booking fee and all the cheap deals there for you to see.  However, it requires two websites, so do a dry run on both sites before booking for real.

  • Step 1, go to www.bahn.de, the German Railways website, and book the overnight sleeper train from Cologne to Warsaw & back (obviously, it's the one shown as having 0 changes).  Bookings open 90 days before departure from Cologne to Warsaw, but only 60 days before departure for Warsaw to Cologne.  The search results will show the cheap 'Savings' fares (if available) and fully-flexible normal fares for each type of seat, couchette & sleeper.  You pay by credit card and print out your own tickets.  Easy!  The prices shown on www.bahn.de are in euro, and are the total cost for all passengers selected, not per person.  If you have any difficulty booking this train online, book by email or phone instead, as shown below.  I recommend registering when it asks you before completing the purchase, so you can easily retrieve any bookings later.

  • Step 2, go to either www.eurostar.com or www.raileurope.co.uk and book a London-Cologne Eurostar+Thalys ticket, using the train times on this page as a guide Cologne is shown as 'Koln' on the Eurostar site.  Book early to see the cheapest fares.  Make sure you allow plenty of time for the connection in Cologne.  It's obvious, but remember that your return departure date from Cologne will be the day after your departure date from Warsaw!

  • If there are no affordable through fares shown, go to www.raileurope.co.uk and try splitting the journey into separate London-Brussels and Brussels-Cologne sections, looking for cheap fares for each leg.  First, ask for 'Brussels' to 'Cologne' and your dates of travel.  After booking the Thalys from Brussels to Cologne, click 'continue shopping' and book a Eurostar from London to Brussels and back to connect.  Make sure you allow for the 30 minute Eurostar check-in at Brussels on the return journey.

  • Buy a special add-on ticket from almost any station in Britain to London International (St Pancras)

How to buy tickets by email...

If you'd prefer to have someone book it for you, just click here and a booking form will appear which lists all the trains you need to book.  Fill it in & email it to sales@europeanrail.com.  European Rail will make the reservations and call you back to confirm the cost.  If you're okay with the price you can give them your credit card details and they'll send you the tickets.  European Rail is an experienced agency equipped with the German Railways reservation & ticketing system, so they have access to all the cheap fares for travel via Germany.  They charge a £35 booking fee which includes postage to any UK address, or they can send to any address worldwide if you pay the courier fee.  Seat61 gets some commission if you buy tickets using this form.

How to buy tickets by phone...

The best people to call to book this trip are Deutsche Bahn's UK office on 08718 80 80 66 (lines open 09:00-20:00 Monday-Friday, 09:00-13:00 Saturday & Sunday, no booking fee, 2% credit card charge, no charge for debit cards), or www.europeanrail.com on 020 7619 1083 (lines open 08:30-18:00 Monday-Friday, 09:00-13:00 Saturday, £35 fee per booking, but can have more time to help you).  Click here for a list of agencies and other useful information on how to book.


Option 2:  London to Warsaw via the Paris-Berlin 'Perseus' sleeper train...

This is a slower option than the 'Jan Kiepura', but can be handy if you want to stop off in Paris, or can't find any cheap fares available via Cologne.  This option runs daily between 26 March & 2 November 2009, but only runs on Mondays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays outside this period.  It runs via Brussels, not Paris, until 13 December 2008.

London ► Warsaw

  • Travel from London to Paris by Eurostar, leaving London St Pancras at 16:02 (15:32 at weekends), arriving Paris Gare du Nord at 19:17 (18:47 at weekends).  It's a 10 minute walk from the Gare du Nord to the Gare de l'Est.  By all means take an earlier Eurostar if you'd like to spend some time in Paris, or if it has cheaper seats available.

  • Travel from Paris to Berlin by the City Night Line sleeper train 'Perseus', leaving Paris Gare de l'Est at 20:20 and arriving at Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 08:59 next morning.  This train runs daily for most of the year, but only 4 times a week in winter.  It runs on Mondays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays until 18 March 2010, then daily for the summer until 8 November 2010, then on Mondays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays again until March 2011.  The 'Perseus' has sleepers (1, 2 & 3 berth with washbasin or deluxe with shower & toilet), 4-berth & 6-berth couchettes, seats and a bistro car, see the photos & information below, or click for more pictures & information about this train.

  • Travel from Berlin to Warsaw on the 'Berlin-Warszawa Express', leaving Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 12:29 and arriving Poznan at 15:25 and Warsaw Centralna at 18:06.  The Berlin-Warszawa Express is a modern air-conditioned 'EuroCity' service with comfortable seats, a trolley refreshment service and a restaurant car serving drinks, snacks and full meals.  Treat yourself to a meal in the restaurant:  Three courses, a beer and a coffee come to less than £9.  Credit cards accepted.

Warsaw ► London

  • Travel from Warsaw to Berlin on the 'Berlin-Warszawa Express', leaving Warsaw Centralna at 11:35 or Poznan at 14:23, arriving at Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 17:17.

  • Travel from Berlin to Paris by City Night Line sleeper train 'Perseus', leaving Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 19:57 and arriving Paris Gare de l'Est at 09:23 next morning.  This train runs daily for most of the year, but only 4 times a week in winter.  It runs on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays until 17 March 2010, then daily until 7 November 2010, then on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays again until March 2011.  The 'Perseus' has ordinary seats (not recommended), couchettes (4-bunk or 6-bunk) and modern sleeping-cars (1, 2 or 3-berth standard rooms with washbasin or deluxe rooms with private shower & toilet, highly recommended), plus a bistro-restaurant car, see the photos & information below.  Breakfast is included in the fare for sleeper passengers.  More pictures & information about this train.
  • Travel from Paris to London by Eurostar, leaving Paris Nord at 11:13 and arriving London St Pancras at 12:29.

Introducing the Paris - Berlin City Night Line sleeper train...

The Paris-Berlin overnight train is one of the German Railway's excellent 'City Night Line' sleeper trains.  Called the 'Perseus', it has modern 'Comfortline' sleeping-cars (1, 2 & 3-berth deluxe rooms with private shower & toilet, 1, 2 & 3-berth standard rooms with washbasin, shower at the end of the corridor, all rooms with power points for mobiles & laptop computers), modern air-conditioned couchettes (choose between a berth in a 4- or 6-berth compartment), ordinary seats (not recommended, as a couchette is far better) and a bistro-restaurant car.   Inclusive fares are charged covering travel plus sleeping accommodation.  The sleeping-car fare includes a light breakfast in the restaurant car.  More pictures and information about this train.

A 1 2 or 3 bed sleeper on the Brussels-Berlin train

1, 2 or 3 bed sleeper: The most comfortable & civilised option, with proper beds & washbasin.

    4-berth couchettes

4-berth couchettes:  Ideal for families, much more space per person than 6-berth couchettes.

    6-berth couchettes

6-berth couchettes:  The budget option, far better than a seat for just a few euros more...

    Bistro car

Bistro-bar car: 

The bistro car serves meals, snacks & drinks in the evening, breakfast in the morning.

More pictures & information about this train...

On board the Berlin-Warszawa Express:

Air-conditioned 2nd class seating on the Berlin-Warsaw Express
Above:  The Berlin-Warszawa Express uses modern, air-conditioned coaches.  The elegant restaurant car serves beer, snacks, wine and affordable meals.  Treat yourself!

How much does it cost?

 1. London to Paris

 by Eurostar:

From £39 one-way or £69 return 2nd class.   Child, youth & senior fares

From £107 one-way or £189 return 1st class.

 
 2. Paris to Berlin by

 sleeper train (per person):

In a

seat

In a couchette In the sleeping-car (standard room *) Deluxe sleeper
6-bunk  4-bunk  3-bed  2-bed  1-bed  2-bed 1-bed
 Savings fare, one way from: £27 £45 69 euro (£60) £64 £73 £128 £91 £174
 Savings fare, return from: £54 £90 138 euro (£120) £128 £146 £256 £182 £348
 Normal fare, one-way: £110 £124 197 euro (£171) £143 £161 £198 £213 £250
 Normal fare, return: £186 £212 394 euro (£342) £244 £274 £336 £362 £424
 Child under 15* with own berth: £55 £62 ? £71 £80 £98 £106 £124
 Child under 6* without own berth: Child under 6* sharing berth travels free...
 
 3. Berlin to Warsaw

 by Berlin-Warszawa Express:

 About £28 one-way or £56 return 2nd class.

 About £43 one-way or £86 return 1st class.

* If you have children aged 4- 5 or 12-14, please read this note before booking the City Night Line sleeper train.

Savings fare = Special cheap fare, price varies so book in advance, limited availability, no refunds or changes to travel plans. 

Normal fare = fully flexible, refundable, buy any time.

Youth fares: There is a 25% discount on normal fares (but not Savings fares) for anyone under 26 years old.  Savings fares usually cheaper!

Senior fares: There is a 20% discount on normal fares (but not Savings fares) for anyone under 26 years old.  Savings fares usually cheaper!

Buy tickets online at www.raileurope.co.uk...

This is the simplest way to book, as www.raileurope.co.uk is the easiest website to use and you can book the Eurostar, the Paris-Berlin sleeper and the Berlin-Warsaw train together as one transaction.  It's also backed by a UK call centre if you need any help.  However, it's also worth checking prices for the Paris-Berlin sleeper using www.bahn.de, as this accesses the German reservation system and prices sometimes vary from those on the French system.  www.bahn.de also tends to be a pound or two cheaper for the Berlin-Warsaw train.

  • Go to www.raileurope.co.uk.  Tickets can be sent to any UK address or can be collected at the station.  Only UK credit cards are accepted.  Bookings for all trains open 90 days before departure, except for the inward Warsaw to Berlin leg, where bookings only open 60 days before departure.

  • Step 1, book the sleeper from Paris to Berlin.  Enter 'Paris' to 'Berlin' and your dates of travel.  It's best to book the Paris-Berlin sleeper train first and check its exact timetable before booking the Eurostar connection, in case times vary from the ones shown above.  For some reason, www.raileurope.co.uk won't book 4-berth couchettes on this train.  And if you've a child aged 4- 5 or 12-14 please read this note.

  • Step 2, after booking the Paris-Berlin train, add it to your basket & click 'continue shopping'.  Now book the Eurostar from London to Paris and back, using the recommended Eurostar times above as a guide.  By all means book an earlier Eurostar outward or a later Eurostar on the way back if these have cheaper seats available or if you'd like to stop off in Paris.

  • Step 3, click 'continue shopping' again and book the train from Berlin to Warsaw & back.

  • Tickets are sent from Rail Europe's UK office and generally arrive within a couple of days.

  • Buy a special add-on ticket from almost any station in Britain to London International (St Pancras)

Buy tickets online using www.bahn.de & www.eurostar.com...

This involves two websites, so do a 'dry run' first on both sites to check prices and availability before booking for real.  www.bahn.de can book all accommodation, including 4-berth couchettes, though for some reason won't offer 3-bed sleepers to solo travellers (though raileurope.co.uk will!).  If you book using the bahn.de site, children under 6 go free, children under 14 can get the child rate, which are the correct age limits for this train.

  • Step 1, Go to www.bahn.de, the German Railways website, and book from Paris to Berlin & back on the direct overnight sleeper train.  The search results will show cheap 'savings' fares (if available) and fully-flexible fares for each type of seat, couchette & sleeper.  You pay by credit card and print out your own tickets.  Easy!  The prices shown on www.bahn.de are in euro, and are the total cost for all passengers selected, not per person.  I recommend registering when it asks you before completing the purchase, so you can easily retrieve any bookings.  Always book the sleeper train first and check its exact arrival & departure times before booking the Eurostar connection, as times can vary.  Allow at least 90 minutes on the outward journey and 1 hour on the return to make the connection in Paris.

  • Step 2, still on www.bahn.de, now use the journey planner to bring up the connecting Berlin-Warsaw trains shown in the train times above, and buy the ticket.  It will show if any cheap special fares are available.  You can simply print out your own Online Ticket.  Alternatively, if you have any problems, Berlin-Warsaw trains can also be booked very easily at www.raileurope.co.uk, although this usually costs a pound or two more than using Deutsche Bahn.

  • Step 3, go to www.eurostar.com to book your Eurostar tickets between London and Paris, using the Eurostar times above as a guide.  By all means book an earlier Eurostar outwards, or a later Eurostar on the way back, if this has cheaper seats available of if you'd like to stop off in Paris for a while.  Eurostar tickets can be sent to any UK address, self-printed, or collected at the station.

  • Buy a special add-on ticket from almost any station in Britain to London International (St Pancras)

How to buy tickets by email...

If you'd prefer to have someone book it for you, just click here and a booking form will appear which lists all the trains you need to book.  Fill it in & email it to sales@europeanrail.com.  European Rail will make the reservations and call you back to confirm the cost.  If you're okay with the price you can give them your credit card details and they'll send you the tickets.  European Rail is an experienced agency equipped with the German Railways reservation & ticketing system, so they have access to all the cheap fares for travel via Germany.  They charge a £35 booking fee which includes postage to any UK address, or they can send to any address worldwide if you pay the courier fee.  Seat61 gets some commission if you buy tickets using this form.

How to buy tickets by phone...

If you'd prefer to book all these trains by phone, just call Deutsche Bahn's UK office on 08718 80 80 66 (lines open 09:00-20:00 Monday-Friday, 09:00-13:00 Saturday & Sunday, no booking fee, 2% credit card charge, no charge for debit cards), or a booking agency such as European Rail on 020 7619 1083 (lines open 09:00-18:00 Monday-Friday, 09:00-13:00 Saturday, £35 booking fee).

 

 

 London to Wroclaw, Katowice, Oswiecim (Auschwitz) & Krakow     

The fastest & cheapest way to travel between London & Krakow is either via Warsaw or via Berlin, both these options are shown in detail below.  Alternatively, it costs only a few pounds more and takes only a bit longer to travel via Prague, so why not combine the two great cities of Prague & Krakow in one flight-free trip?

Option 1:  London to Katowice & Krakow via Warsaw...

This is probably the fastest & most convenient option.

Train times London ► Katowice & Krakow

  • Travel from London to Warsaw using the Cologne-Warsaw 'Jan Kiepura' sleeper train as shown above.  You leave London at 12:57 Mon-Thurs or 14:34 Fri, Sat & Sun, change at Brussels & Cologne to arrive Warsaw Centralna at 10:24 next morning.

  • Regular InterCity trains link Warsaw Centralna with both Krakow & Katowice.  A fast air-conditioned InterCity train leaves Warsaw Centralna at 12:15 arriving Krakow Glowny at 14:44, with a restaurant car available for lunch (treat yourself!).  An air-conditioned EuroCity train leaves Warsaw Centralna at 12:45 arriving Katowice at 15:08, also with restaurant car.

Train times Katowice & Krakow ► London

  • Regular InterCity trains link both Krakow & Katowice with Warsaw Centralna.  An air-conditioned InterCity train leaves Krakow Glowny at 14:14 arriving Warsaw Centralna at 16:47, restaurant car available.  An air-conditioned EuroCity train leaves Katowice at 13:00 arriving Katowice at 15:22.

  • Travel from Warsaw to London using the Warsaw-Cologne 'Jan Kiepura' sleeper train as shown above.  You leave Warsaw Centralna at 18:10, change at Cologne & Brussels to arrive London at 12:33 next day.

Fares & how to buy tickets...

  • See the London-Warsaw section for fares & how to buy tickets for the London-Warsaw part of the journey.

  • You can buy your Warsaw-Krakow ticket online using www.raileurope.co.uk, price £22 each way 2nd class, £31 each way 1st class.  Alternatively, it's easy enough to buy your ticket to Krakow at Warsaw Centralna when you get there.

  • If you'd like someone book it all for you, just click here and a booking form will appear which lists all the trains you need to book.  Fill it in & email it to sales@europeanrail.com.  European Rail will make the reservations and call you back to confirm the cost.  If you're okay with the price you can give them your credit card details and they will send you the tickets.  European Rail is an experienced agency equipped with the German Railways reservation & ticketing system, so they have access to all the cheap fares for travel via Germany.  They charge a £35 booking fee which includes postage to any UK address, or they can send to any address worldwide if you pay the courier fee.  Seat61 gets some commission if you buy tickets using this form.


Option 2:  London to Wroclaw, Katowice & Krakow via Berlin...

This is a slightly slower option than the 'Jan Kiepura', but can be handy if you want to stop off in Paris, or can't find any cheap fares available via Cologne & Warsaw.  This option runs daily between late March & early November, but the Paris-Berlin sleeper train only runs on Mondays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays in winter.

London ► Wroclaw, Katowice & Krakow

  • Travel from London to Paris by Eurostar, leaving London St Pancras at 16:02 (15:32 at weekends), arriving Paris Gare du Nord at 19:17 (18:47 at weekends).  It's a 10 minute walk from the Gare du Nord to the Gare de l'Est.  By all means take an earlier Eurostar if you'd like to spend some time in Paris, or if it has cheaper seats available.

  • Travel from Paris to Berlin by the City Night Line sleeper train 'Perseus', leaving Paris Gare de l'Est at 20:20 and arriving at Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 08:59 next morning.  This train runs daily in summer, but only 4 times a week in winter.  It runs on Mondays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays until 18 March 2010, then daily for the summer until 8 November 2010, then on Mondays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays again until March 2011.  The 'Perseus' has sleepers (1, 2 & 3 berth with washbasin or deluxe with shower & toilet), 4-berth & 6-berth couchettes, seats and a bistro car, see the photos & information below, or click for more pictures & information about this train.

  • Travel from Berlin to Krakow by direct air-conditioned EuroCity train, leaving Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 09:35 arriving Wroclaw at 15:18, Katowice at 17:54 & Krakow at 19:35.   This train is called the 'Wawel' after the royal castle in Krakow.  It has a modern German 1st class coach with 6-seater compartments, a modern German 2nd class coach and two modern air-conditioned Polish coaches, all with open-plan saloon seating.  There are trolley refreshments available but no restaurant or bar car, so it's a good idea to bring your own picnic with wine or beer and enjoy the ride!

  •   The German coaches have power sockets for laptops & mobiles at the seats around tables, although not at the other seats.  See 3D virtual tour inside the German intercity coaches used on this train.

Krakow, Katowice & Wroclaw ► London

  • Travel from Krakow to Berlin by direct air-conditioned EuroCity train, the 'Wawel'.  It leaves Krakow at 07:24, Katowice at 09:07, and Wroclaw at 11:48, arriving Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 17:40.  It has a modern German 1st class coach with 6-seater compartments, a modern German 2nd class coach and two modern air-conditioned Polish coaches, all with open-plan saloon seating.  There are trolley refreshments available but no restaurant or bar car, so why not bring your own picnic on board with wine or a few beers?  See 3D virtual tour inside the German intercity coaches used on this train.

  • Travel from Berlin to Paris by City Night Line sleeper train 'Perseus', leaving Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 19:57 and arriving Paris Gare de l'Est at 09:23 next morning.  This train runs daily in summer, but only 4 times a week in winter.  It runs on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays until 17 March 2010, then daily until 7 November 2010, then on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays again until March 2011.  The 'Perseus' has ordinary seats (not recommended), couchettes (4-bunk or 6-bunk) and modern sleeping-cars (1, 2 or 3-berth standard rooms with washbasin or deluxe rooms with private shower & toilet, highly recommended), plus a bistro-restaurant car, see the photos & information below.  Breakfast is included in the fare for sleeper passengers.  More pictures & information about this train.
  • Travel from Paris to London by Eurostar, leaving Paris Nord at 11:13 and arriving London St Pancras at 12:29.

Introducing the Paris - Berlin City Night Line sleeper train...

The Paris-Berlin overnight train is one of the German Railway's excellent 'City Night Line' sleeper trains.  Called the 'Perseus', it has modern sleeping-cars (1, 2 & 3-berth deluxe rooms with private shower & toilet, 1, 2 & 3-berth standard rooms with washbasin, shower at the end of the corridor, all rooms with power points for mobiles & laptop computers), modern air-conditioned couchettes (choose between a berth in a 4- or 6-berth compartment), ordinary seats (not recommended, a couchette is far better) and a bistro-restaurant car.   Inclusive fares are charged covering travel plus sleeping accommodation.  The sleeping-car fare includes a light breakfast in the restaurant car.  More pictures & information about this City Night Line train.

A 1 2 or 3 bed sleeper on the Brussels-Berlin train

1, 2 or 3 bed sleeper: The most comfortable & civilised option, with proper beds & washbasin.

    4-berth couchettes

4-berth couchettes:  Ideal for families, much more space per person than 6-berth couchettes.

    6-berth couchettes

6-berth couchettes:  The budget option, far better than a seat for just a few euros more...

    Bistro car

Bistro-bar car: 

The bistro car serves meals, snacks & drinks in the evening, breakfast in the morning.

More pictures & information about this train...

... and  the Berlin-Krakow EuroCity train, the 'Wawel'...

The Wawel EuroCity train from Berlin to Krakow, about to leave Berlin Hauptbahnhof   German 2nd class car, as used on the Wawel from Berlin to Krakow   1st class car as used on the Wawel from Berlin to Krakow (6-seat compartment type)
The 'Wawel' from Berlin to Krakow, about to leave Berlin Hauptbahnhof...  This is one of the two Polish air-conditioned EuroCity coaches.   2nd class seats in one of the German air-conditioned cars used on the 'Wawel' from Berlin to Krakow...  The Polish cars are similar.  Bring your own picnic & beer or wine...   1st class seats in the German air-conditioned 1st class car on the 'Wawel' from Berlin to Krakow, in 6-seater compartments.

Oswiecim (Auschwitz)

If you are visiting the museum at Oswiecim (better known by its infamous German name, Auschwitz), change trains at Katowice.  A local train leaves Katowice at around 18:55, arriving Oswiecim 19:55.  Alternatively, continue to Krakow, as regular local trains link Krakow with Oswiecim every hour or two.  See www.bahn.de (English button top right) to check train times.  Once in Oswiecim, there are two camps to visit, Auschwitz I which is an ex-Polish army barracks in the town itself about 10 minutes walk from the station (turn right outside the station then veer left), and Auschwitz-Birkenau II which was a purpose-built concentration camp a little way out of town, about 30 minutes walk from the station (turn right, then turn right again at the first major road bridge across the railway).  There are also regular buses between Krakow and Oswiecim, see www.pksoswiecim.pl/strona.php?grupa=9.  Alternatively, you can visit Auschwitz on a one-day tour from Krakow, try www.isango.com.

How much does it cost?

 1. London to Paris

 by Eurostar:

From £39 one-way or £69 return 2nd class.   Child, youth & senior fares

From £107 one-way or £189 return 1st class.

 
 2. Paris to Berlin by

 sleeper train (per person):

In a

seat

In a couchette In the sleeping-car (standard room *) Deluxe sleeper
6-bunk  4-bunk  3-bed  2-bed  1-bed  2-bed 1-bed
 Savings fare, one way from: £27 £45 69 euro (£60) £64 £73 £128 £91 £174
 Savings fare, return from: £54 £90 138 euro (£120) £128 £146 £256 £182 £348
 Normal fare, one-way: £110 £124 197 euro (£171) £143 £161 £198 £213 £250
 Normal fare, return: £186 £212 394 euro (£342) £244 £274 £336 £362 £424
 Child under 15* with own berth: £55 £62 ? £71 £80 £98 £106 £124
 Child under 6* without own berth: Child under 6* sharing berth travels free...
 
 3.  Berlin to Krakow

 by InterCity train Wawel

 Normal fare £39 one-way or £78 return 2nd class

 Book-in-advance fare £22 one-way or £44 return 2nd class

 About £60 one-way or £120 return 1st class.

* If you have children aged 4- 5 or 12-14, please read this note before booking the City Night Line sleeper train.

Savings fare = Special cheap fare, book in advance, limited availability, no refunds, no changes to travel plans. 

Normal fare = fully flexible, refundable, buy any time.

Buy tickets online at www.raileurope.co.uk & www.bahn.de...

www.raileurope.co.uk is the easiest way to book the London-Paris & Paris-Berlin trains, then the cheapest way to book the Berlin to Krakow train is at the German Railways website, www.bahn.de.  Do a dry run on both sites first to check prices & availability.

  • Go to www.raileurope.co.uk.  Tickets can be sent to any UK address or can be collected at the station.  Only UK credit cards are accepted.

  • Step 1, book the sleeper from Paris to Berlin.  Enter 'Paris' to 'Berlin' and your dates of travel.  It's best to book the Paris-Berlin sleeper train first and check its exact timetable before booking the Eurostar connection, in case times vary from the ones shown above.  For some reason, www.raileurope.co.uk won't book 4-berth couchettes on this train.  If you've a child aged 4- 5 or 12-14 please read this note.

  • Step 2, after booking the Paris-Berlin train, add it to your basket & click 'continue shopping'.  Now book the Eurostar from London to Paris and back, using the recommended Eurostar times above as a guide.  By all means book an earlier Eurostar outward or a later Eurostar on the way back if these have cheaper seats available or if you'd like to stop off in Paris.

  • Step 3, now go to the German Railways website www.bahn.de and use the journey planner to bring up the connecting Berlin-Krakow trains shown in the train times above, and buy the ticket.  It will show if any cheap special fares are available.  You simply print out your own Online Ticket.   I recommend registering when it asks you before completing the purchase, so you can easily retrieve any bookings later.  Alternatively, if you have any problems, Berlin-Krakow trains can also be booked very easily at www.raileurope.co.uk, although this may cost more than using Deutsche Bahn.

  • Buy a special add-on ticket from almost any station in Britain to London International (St Pancras)

Buy tickets online using www.bahn.de & www.eurostar.com...

Alternatively, you can book London-Paris using www.eurostar.com, then book Paris-Berlin & Berlin-Krakow using the German Railways site, www.bahn.de.  Do a 'dry run' first on both sites to check prices and availability before booking for real.

  • Step 1, go to www.bahn.de, the German Railways website, and book a ticket from Paris to Berlin Hbf and back on the overnight sleeper train.  The search results will show cheap 'savings' fares (if available) and fully-flexible fares for each type of seat, couchette & sleeper.  You pay by credit card and print out your own tickets.  Easy!  The prices shown on www.bahn.de are in euro, and are the total cost for all passengers selected, not per person.  I recommend registering when it asks you before completing the purchase, so you can easily retrieve any bookings.  Always book the sleeper train first and check its exact arrival & departure times before booking the Eurostar connection, as times can vary.

  • Step 2, stay on www.bahn.de and use the journey planner to bring up the connecting Berlin-Krakow train shown in the train times section above, and buy the ticket.  It will show if any cheap special fares are available.  You can simply print out your own Online Ticket.  Alternatively, if you have any problems, Berlin-Krakow trains can also be booked very easily at www.raileurope.co.uk, although this may cost more than using Deutsche Bahn.

  • Step 3, go to www.eurostar.com to book your connecting Eurostar tickets between London and Paris, using the Eurostar times above as a guide.  By all means book an earlier Eurostar outwards, or a later Eurostar on the way back, if this has cheaper seats available of if you'd like to stop off in Paris for a while.  Eurostar tickets can be sent to any UK address, self-printed, or collected at the station.

  • Buy a special add-on ticket from almost any station in Britain to London International (St Pancras)

How to buy tickets by email...

If you'd prefer to have someone book it for you, just click here and a booking form will appear which lists all the trains you need to book.  Fill it in & email it to sales@europeanrail.com.  European Rail will make the reservations and call you back to confirm the cost.  If you're okay with the price you can give them your credit card details and they'll send you the tickets.  European Rail is an experienced agency equipped with the German Railways reservation & ticketing system, so they have access to all the cheap fares for travel via Germany.  They charge a £35 booking fee which includes postage to any UK address, or they can send to any address worldwide if you pay the courier fee.  Seat61 gets some commission if you buy tickets using this form.

How to buy tickets by phone...

If you'd prefer to book all these trains by phone, just call Deutsche Bahn's UK office on 08718 80 80 66 (lines open 09:00-20:00 Monday-Friday, 09:00-13:00 Saturday & Sunday, no booking fee, 2% credit card charge, no charge for debit cards), or a booking agency such as European Rail on 020 7619 1083 (lines open 08:30-18:00 Monday-Friday, 09:00-13:00 Saturday, £35 booking fee).


Option 3:  London to Krakow by daytime trains to Berlin, then sleeper to Krakow...

This option is no longer possible, as the Berlin-Krakow sleeper train will no longer run as from 13 December 2009.


Option 4:  London to Krakow via Prague...

Travelling to Krakow via Prague takes only a bit longer and costs only marginally more than going via Warsaw or Berlin as shown above, so why not combine Prague & Krakow in one flight-free trip?!  By all means travel via Prague in one direction, via Warsaw in the other.

Train times London ► Prague ► Krakow

  • Travel from London to Prague via the Cologne-Prague sleeper train 'Phoenix', as shown on the London to Prague page.  You leave London by Eurostar at 12:57 Mon-Thurs or 14:34 Fri, Sat & Sun, change at Brussels and Cologne onto the Phoenix sleeper train arriving Prague Hlavni station at 09:27 next morning.  Enjoy the morning exploring Prague, or stay a night or two if you wish, all trains are ticketed separately anyway, so it makes no difference to the price.

  • Travel from Prague to Krakow by modern air-conditioned EuroCity trains, leaving Prague's Hlavni station daily at 10:11, changing trains at Katowice (arrive 15:50, departing again at 16:15)  and arriving Krakow at 17:55.  A restaurant car is available for lunch, so treat yourself!  Or there's a daily Prague-Krakow sleeper train, the 'Silesia', leaving Prague Hlavni at 21:32 and arriving Krakow Glowny at 06:24.  A safe & secure sleeping-car with 1, 2 & 3 bed rooms is available (the recommended option), also couchettes (6-berth) and ordinary seats (not recommended).

Train times Krakow ► Prague ► London

  • Travel from Krakow to Prague, leaving Krakow at 14:54, change at Bohumin (arrive 18:22 depart 19:50) arriving at Prague's Hlavni station at 23:51.  Alternatively, there's a Krakow-Prague sleeper train, the 'Silesia', leaving Krakow daily at 22:11 and arriving Prague Hlavni station at 06:51 next morning.  A safe & secure sleeping-car with 1, 2 & 3 bed rooms is available (the recommended option), also couchettes (6-berth) and ordinary seats (not recommended).

  • Spend some time in Prague...

  • Travel from Prague to London via the Prague-Cologne sleeper train 'Kopernikus' as shown on the London to Prague page.  You leave Prague Hlavni station at 18:31 by sleeper to Cologne, change in Cologne & Brussels to arrive London St Pancras at 12:33 next day.

Fares & how to buy tickets...

  • See the London to Prague page for fares & how to buy tickets from London to Prague.

  • You can buy Prague-Krakow train tickets online using www.raileurope.co.uk.  Prague-Krakow by daytime trains costs £43 each way 2nd class, £63 each way 1st class.  Prague-Krakow by sleeper costs £57 each way per person including a bed in a shared 3-berth sleeper or £86 each way with a bed in a 2-berth sleeper.  You may get a cheaper rate if you book by phone with DB's UK office, call 08718 80 80 66, lines open 09:00-20:00 Monday-Friday, 09:00-13:00 Saturday & Sunday.

  • Don't be afraid to book Krakow-Prague or Prague-Krakow trains in person at the station when you get there.  This is the cheapest way, and there's almost always place available.  Bought at the station in Prague, Prague to Krakow costs just 1068 Kr (£34) full fare, though you can usually get a cheaper 855 Kr (£29) fare even on the day of travel.  To use the overnight train, add the following sleeper supplements:  274 Kr for a couchette, 406 Kr (£14) for a bed in a 3-bed sleeper or 606 Kr (£21) for a bed in a 2-bed sleeper.

 

 
  DFDS Seaways ferry 'Princess of Norway' about to sail from Newcastle.

DFDS Seaways 'Princess of Norway' about to sail overnight from Newcastle to Amsterdam...

  A Commodore Deluxe cabin on DFDS Seaways

A Commodore deluxe cabin with minibar, satellite TV, shower & toilet.  See the video...

  A standard cabin on DFDS Seaways Newcastle-Amsterdam ferry.

A standard 'Seaways' class cabin with shower & toilet on DFDS 'Princess of Norway' from Newcastle to Amsterdam.

Of course, you can take a train up to London and travel from London to Poland as described above, and this can be the easiest option.  Here's some advice on buying connecting train tickets to London.  But the Jan Kiepura sleeper train to Warsaw actually starts in Amsterdam, and DFDS Seaways run an excellent daily overnight cruise ferry from Newcastle to Amsterdam. P&O Ferries also sail overnight from Hull to Holland, and there's an overnight Stena Line ferry from Harwich in Essex to Holland, too.  So why not by-pass London, and have a day in Amsterdam into the bargain before travelling on to Poland?

Scotland, north of England, East Anglia ► Poland

  • Day 1, Take an afternoon train from your local station to either Harwich, Hull or Newcastle, whichever is most convenient for where you live.  Transfer to the ferry terminal.
  • Sail overnight by cruise ferry to Holland, with bars, restaurants & comfortable en suite cabins, arriving next morning.  DFDS Seaways operate Newcastle-Amsterdam (the port is actually IJmuiden), P&O operate Hull to Rotterdam Europoort, and Stena Line operate Harwich-Hoek van Holland with train connections to Amsterdam.  For details of ferry timetables, station-port transfers, fares & how to buy tickets for travel via each of these ferry routes, see the UK-Netherlands page.

  • Day 2, spend some time in Amsterdam, all the sights are easy walking distance from Centraal station.  Left luggage lockers are available at Centraal station, 4-6 euros for 24 hours, paid for with Maestro or Visa cards.

  • Day 2 evening, take the EuroNight sleeper train 'Jan Kiepura' from Amsterdam to Warsaw.  The Jan Kiepura leaves Amsterdam at 19:01 daily and arrives at Warsaw Centralna at 10:24 next morning (day 3).  Sleeping-car, couchettes & seats are available, for details of what this train is like see here.

  • Day 3, change in Warsaw for Krakow, as shown above.

Poland ► Scotland, north of England, East Anglia

  • Day 1, take a train from Krakow to Warsaw, as shown above.

  • Day 1, evening:  The EuroNight sleeper train 'Jan Kiepura' leaves Warsaw Centralna at 18:10 daily, arriving Amsterdam Centraal at 12:24 next morning.  Sleeping-car, couchettes & seats available, for details of what this train is like see here.

  • Day 2:  Spend the day in Amsterdam.  Left luggage lockers are available, 4-6 euro for 24 hours, paid for with Maestro or Visa cards.

  • Day 2, late afternoon/evening:  Travel overnight by cruise ferry from Holland to either Harwich, Hull or Newcastle, whichever is most convenient for where you live, arriving next morning (day 4).  Transfer to the station and take a train home.  For details of timetables, fares & how to buy tickets for travel via each of these ferry routes, see the UK-Netherlands page.

Fares & how to buy tickets...

 

 

It's not difficult to buy train tickets for domestic journeys within Poland at the station ticket office.  It can help to write down what you want, in case staff don't speak English very well.  UK agencies such as DB's UK office on 08718 80 80 66 (open 09:00-17:00 Mon-Fri) or www.europeanrail.com can usually get you reservations on international trains starting in Poland.  However, if they have problems, or if you want to see if buying locally would be cheaper, try contacting the following agency in Poland:

Polish train ticketing agency www.polrail.com...

Polish train ticketing agency www.polrail.com comes highly recommended if you want to arrange train tickets within Poland in advance, or book international train tickets starting in Poland, for example, from Warsaw to Prague, Vienna, Budapest, Moscow, Kiev, Lviv or Vilnius, or from Krakow to Prague, Budapest or Vienna, etc..  You should arrange tickets between 10 & 60 days before travel (because Polish train reservations open 60 days before departure, but 10 days is necessary for the agency to buy and send tickets). Tickets can be couriered to your home address in any country, or they can arrange ticket collection within Poland, for example, at your hotel.  If you use their services, feedback is always welcome!


 

 The Thomas Cook European Timetable...

Thomas Cook European Timetable -  click to buy onlineThomas Cook Rail Map of Europe - buy onlineThe Thomas Cook European timetable has train & ferry times for every country in Europe plus currency & climate information.  Published since 1873, it costs £13.99.  It's essential for any serious traveller and an inspiration for armchair travellers.  Still not convinced you need one?  More information on what the Thomas Cook Timetable contains.  You can buy the latest monthly edition online at www.thomascooktimetables.com with worldwide delivery or buy it in person from any UK branch of Thomas Cook (ask at the bureau de change), or from W H Smiths in Victoria or Kings Cross stations in London.  Or buy the twice-yearly independent traveller's edition with laminated cover from Amazon.co.uk:  Summer 2010 edition (June to December 2010)

The Thomas Cook Rail Map of Europe is the best and most comprehensive map of train routes right across Europe, from Portugal in the west to Istanbul, Moscow & Ukraine in the east, from Finland in the north to Sicily & Crete in the south.  High speed & scenic routes are highlighted.  Highly recommended!  Buy online at www.amazon.co.uk (worldwide delivery).  See an extract from the map.



 

 Guidebooks...

Definitely take a good guidebook.  For the independent traveller, I think this means one of two guidebooks, either the Lonely Planet or the Rough Guide.  Both series are excellent.  You can buy an in-depth guide for Poland or a guide covering all the countries in Eastern Europe.  My own book, an essential handbook for train travel to Europe based on this website called "The Man in Seat 61", is due to be published in June 2008, and Amazon will let you pre-order now.

Click the images to buy online at Amazon.co.uk...

Or buy Lonely Planets direct from the Lonely Planet website, with shipping worldwide.

Lonely Planet Eastern Europe - buy online at Amazon.co.ukRough Guide to Poland - buy online at Amazon.co.ukRough Guide to Poland - buy online at Amazon.co.ukThe Man in Seat 61 book - click to buy online


 Hotels & accommodation

Hotels in Krakow, Warsaw & elsewhere in Poland...

It's easy to book hotels online to go with your train tickets.  Just use the search box below.  This links to www.hotelscombined.com, a free search tool which checks all the main hotel booking sites (Expedia, Travelocity, LateRooms, Opodo, Venere, Asiarooms and many others) to find just about the widest range of hotels with the cheapest rates on the net.  Set up in 2005, it's an amazing system and probably the best place to start for booking any hotel online in any country, worldwide.

 

◄◄◄ Search all major hotel

booking websites at once...

Hotel reservations? Find the right hotel first. Compare here.

Powered by Hotelscombined.com  

Other hotel sites worth trying...

Backpacker hostels...

  • If you're on a tight budget, don't forget the hostels.  For a dorm bed or an ultra-cheap private room in backpacker hostels in most European cities use www.hostelbookers.com.


 Holidays to Poland by train...

 

020 3327 0761

If you want a holiday to Krakow or Warsaw by train not plane, but want someone else to organise all the train tickets & hotels for you, one specialist company can do just that, for a holiday with no airport hassles and no long days in cramped coach seats on motorways.

Railbookers, www.railbookers.com, 020 3327 0761....

Railbookers can tailor-make a flight-free holiday to Poland for you, with train travel & hotels, for however long you like, leaving on any date you like.  For example, a 6 night trip from London to Krakow, Warsaw & Berlin costs around £679 per person.  See their Poland page for details.


 Travel insurance, health card, SIM card

Get travel insurance..

 
   

Never travel without insurance from a reliable travel insurer, with at least £1m or preferably £5m medical cover.  It should also cover loss of cash (up to a limit) and belongings, and cancellation. An annual multi-trip policy is usually cheaper than several single-trip policies even for just 2 or 3 trips a year (I have an annual policy myself).  Here are some suggested insurers.  Seat61 gets a small commission if you buy through these links.

If you live in the UK, get quotes from Columbus Direct or Go Travel Insurance, or go to Confused.com to run a price comparison on a whole range of travel insurance providers for your dates of travel, seeing their policy's features at a glance.

Don't expect travel insurance to bail you out of every missed connection, but European international rail conditions of carriage (known as the 'CIV') contain consumer protection provisions that entitle you to travel forward by the next available train if you miss a connection because of a delay to the first train, irrespective of who operates which train, and even if your ticket is in theory train-specific and non-changeable.  Feedback from using insurance for rail & ferry travel is always welcome.

        If you live in Australia, New Zealand, Ireland or the EU, see Columbus Direct Australia.

   If you live in the USA or Canada, see Travel Guard USA.

Get an EU health card...

If you're a UK citizen travelling in Europe, you should apply for a free European Health Insurance Card, which entitles you to free or reduced rate health care if you become ill or get injured in many European countries, under a reciprocal arrangement with the NHS.  This replaced the old E111 forms as from January 2006.  The EHIC card is available from www.ehic.org.uk.  It doesn't remove the need for travel insurance, though.

Get a pre-paid euro currency MasterCard from Caxton FX...

You can save money on ATM charges and exchange rates using a Caxton FX euro currency MasterCard, or indeed the multi-currency 'Global Traveller' MasterCard.   Find out about these cards & sign up here.

Get an international SIM card...

Mobile phones can cost a fortune to use abroad, and if you're not careful you can return home to find some huge bills waiting for you.  I've known people run up over £1,000 in data charges just by leaving their iPhone connected during a simple trip to Europe.  However, if you buy a global SIM card for your mobile phone from a company such as www.Go-Sim.com you can slash the cost by up to 85% and limit any damage to the amount you have pre-paid.  Go-Sim cuts call costs in 175 countries worldwide, and you can receive incoming calls and texts for free in 75 countries.  It's pay-as-you-go, so no nasty bills when you get home.  It also allows cheap data access for laptops & PDAs.  A Go-Sim account and any credit on it doesn't expire if it's not used between trips, unlike some others, so a Go-Sim phone number becomes your 'global phone number' for life.


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