Paris has six major long-distance train stations. Each one serves a different part of Europe and France. When you book a train to or from Paris, the booking page usually shows only “Paris” as the city, but before you confirm, open the train details and check which station your train actually uses.
Getting this wrong is one of the most common and costly mistakes for European rail travellers in France. You cannot recover a missed train because you went to the wrong Paris terminal.
| Direction | Station | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| UK, Netherlands, Belgium | Gare du Nord | London, Amsterdam, Brussels |
| Germany, Alsace, Luxembourg | Gare de l’Est | Frankfurt, Munich, Berlin, Strasbourg |
| Southeast France, Switzerland, Italy | Gare de Lyon | Lyon, Marseille, Nice, Geneva, Milan |
| Southwest France, Brittany | Gare Montparnasse | Bordeaux, Rennes, Nantes, Toulouse |
| Normandy | Gare Saint-Lazare | Caen, Rouen, Le Havre, Cherbourg |
| Spain (overnight), central France | Gare d’Austerlitz | Barcelona overnight, Limoges |
| OUIGO low-cost, some Intercités | Gare de Bercy | OUIGO services to south and west France |
Use this table to match your destination to your station. Then confirm the station name in the booking details before you pay.
Which Paris train station do you need?
The six stations form a rough ring around central Paris. Each one was built to serve railway lines heading in a specific direction, and that geography has not changed. If you are travelling to the south of France, you will not find your TGV at Gare du Nord, no matter how central it feels.
Find your station quickly: look at your destination, find the direction, then match it to the table above. If you’re still unsure, search your route on SNCF Connect, the booking platform shows the correct Paris station in the train details.
Always open the train details and read the station name before you pay. Booking pages on third-party platforms often display only “Paris”. The station is in the details.
Gare du Nord, Eurostar, Amsterdam, and northern France
Gare du Nord handles every international train to and from the UK, Netherlands, and Belgium. Eurostar services to London St Pancras, Amsterdam Centraal, and Brussels-Midi all leave from here. Domestic TGV Inoui trains to Lille also depart from this station.
The Eurostar terminal sits on the first floor, reached by escalator opposite platform 17. Walk along the balcony to the check-in gates.
Arrive for Eurostar 60 to 90 minutes before departure. The service includes passport control and security. You cannot treat it like a TGV, where boarding a few minutes before departure is normal. The gates close well before the train leaves, and there is no flexibility once they do.
The Amsterdam and Brussels services are now branded Eurostar following the merger with Thalys, which completed on 1 October 2023. If an older booking confirmation says “Thalys”, the service is the same train under the Eurostar name.
From Gare du Nord, RER B connects quickly to the city centre at Châtelet-Les Halles and continues to Charles de Gaulle Airport. Metro lines 2, 4, and 5 also serve the station. The concourse is busy and can feel overwhelming. Keep your bags close on the platforms, pickpocket incidents here are common enough that it’s worth paying attention.
One more thing: Gare du Nord and Gare de l’Est are separate stations. They’re close, but not the same place. If your onward train is to Germany and you’ve just arrived from London, you need to walk or take one Metro stop to Gare de l’Est.
Gare de l’Est, Germany, Alsace, and French overnight trains
For Germany, Alsace, Luxembourg, and some French overnight trains, go to Gare de l’Est. It’s about 10 to 15 minutes on foot from Gare du Nord, or one stop on Metro line 4 or 5.
TGV Inoui and ICE services to Germany, run jointly by SNCF and DB, cover Frankfurt (Main), Karlsruhe, Mannheim, Stuttgart, and Saarbrücken. From December 2024, a new ICE service also runs to Berlin via Strasbourg, Karlsruhe, and Frankfurt. Strasbourg takes around 1 hour 50 minutes. Frankfurt is under 4 hours. Munich is around 5 hours 30 minutes. These are orientation figures, check the exact time for your train when you book.
Intercités de Nuit domestic overnight trains also use Gare de l’Est for some routes. If you’re planning a night train to Nice or other parts of southern France, check which Paris station the train departs from, some use Gare de l’Est.
Metro lines 4, 5, and 7 serve the station.
For UK-to-Germany journeys, arriving at Gare du Nord by Eurostar, then continuing by ICE or TGV to Frankfurt, budget at least 30 minutes for the inter-station walk or Metro hop, and more if you have luggage. Tight connections between Eurostar and Germany trains via Paris are entirely possible, but you need to book them knowing the station change is part of the journey.
Gare de Lyon, southeast France, Switzerland, and Italy
Lyon, Marseille, Nice, Avignon, Montpellier, Geneva, Lausanne, Turin, Milan: all of these are Gare de Lyon. It’s one of the two busiest long-distance terminals in Paris.
To be clear: Gare de Lyon is a station in Paris. It is named after its destination direction. The station in the city of Lyon is a different place entirely. First-time visitors sometimes confuse the two.
TGV Inoui is the main service for southeast France. Paris to Lyon takes around 2 hours. Paris to Marseille is around 3 hours 20 minutes. For Switzerland, TGV Inoui serves Geneva (around 3 hours) and Lausanne. For Italy, SNCF and Trenitalia co-operate Frecciarossa high-speed trains to Turin and Milan, with the Paris-Milan journey taking around 7 hours.
RER A and RER D serve Gare de Lyon, along with Metro lines 1 and 14. One note on the 2026 summer: between 25 July and 16 August, RER D will not run between Gare du Nord and Gare de Lyon due to engineering works. If you’re making a cross-Paris transfer in that period, use Metro line 5 or get a taxi.
If your ticket is OUIGO to a destination in the southeast, check whether the train departs from Gare de Lyon or Gare de Bercy. Some OUIGO services use Bercy, which is a 10-minute walk from Gare de Lyon but a separate station. Your ticket will specify, read it.
Gare Montparnasse, Bordeaux, Brittany, and the Atlantic coast
Bordeaux, Rennes, Nantes, Toulouse, Brest, Biarritz: all Atlantic coast and southwest destinations use Gare Montparnasse. TGV Inoui trains on this axis are among the fastest in France. Paris to Bordeaux is around 2 hours 5 minutes. Paris to Rennes is around 1 hour 30 minutes on the quickest services. Paris to Nantes is around 2 hours.
Those times are orientation. Exact journey times vary by departure, so check when you book.
Gare Montparnasse sits on the south side of the city, in the 15th arrondissement. If you’re starting from the right bank, near Gare du Nord, Opera, or the Marais, crossing Paris to Montparnasse takes real time. Factor in 30 to 45 minutes just to cross the city before you’re at the station. Missing a TGV because you underestimated the journey across Paris is avoidable.
The station has been undergoing a multi-year renovation, with completion expected late 2026. Platform access and some facilities may be affected during the final stages. Check information screens when you arrive.
Metro lines 4, 6, 12, and 13 serve the station.
Gare Saint-Lazare, Normandy
Normandy means Gare Saint-Lazare. For Caen, Rouen, Le Havre, Cherbourg, and Dieppe, this is the station. Services are SNCF Nomad-operated Intercités trains.
By passenger count, Saint-Lazare is the busiest station in France. Most of that traffic is Île-de-France commuters on Transilien suburban trains. The long-distance Normandy trains depart from platforms 20 to 27, at the far east end of the station. Give yourself time to navigate from the main entrance through the commuter crowds to reach them.
Gare Saint-Lazare serves a completely different part of France from Gare du Nord. If you want to visit Caen, the D-Day beaches, or take a connection for Mont Saint-Michel, you need Saint-Lazare, not Nord, which points northeast towards Belgium and the UK.
Metro lines 3, 9, 12, 13, and 14 serve the station, along with RER E.
Reservation requirements for Normandy Intercités departures are not consistent across all services. Some trains require a reservation, others do not. Check your specific departure on SNCF Connect.
Gare d’Austerlitz and Gare de Bercy, overnight trains and OUIGO
Two smaller stations cover specific services that regularly catch travellers unprepared.
Gare d’Austerlitz is the station for the overnight train to Barcelona. The Intercités de Nuit departs at around 22:13 and arrives at Barcelona Sants around 14:00 the following afternoon. It runs on Friday and Saturday nights year-round, and daily through June, July, August, and September. You can travel in a reclining seat, a 6-berth couchette in 2nd class, or a 4-berth couchette in 1st class, there are no private sleeper compartments on this service. A reservation is mandatory, book on SNCF Connect. Book early if you want a couchette on a popular summer night; couchettes sell before seats.
Gare d’Austerlitz also handles some Intercités trains on routes towards the Loire Valley, Limoges, and central France.
Gare de Bercy is one of OUIGO’s main Paris departure points. It’s about 10 minutes’ walk from Gare de Lyon, or one stop on Metro line 14. OUIGO also uses two suburban stations:
- Massy-Palaiseau, southwestern suburbs, RER B and RER C
- Marne-la-Vallée-Chessy, near Disneyland Paris in the east, RER A
Your OUIGO ticket will always name the departure station. Boarding opens 30 minutes before departure; the train doors close 5 minutes before departure. If you go to the wrong station, you miss the train, and OUIGO tickets are non-refundable.
Changing stations in Paris
Any journey requiring a change between two Paris terminals means crossing a busy city. Allow at least 60 minutes between your arrival and your onward departure. The Metro and RER are fast, but walking to the platform, waiting for the train, and navigating to your next platform all take longer than a map suggests.
| Transfer | Route | Realistic time |
|---|---|---|
| Gare du Nord → Gare de Lyon | RER D (8 min ride) or Metro line 5 | 25-35 min in normal conditions |
| Gare du Nord ↔ Gare de l’Est | Walk (10-15 min) | 20-30 min with luggage |
| Gare de Lyon → Gare de Bercy | Walk (10 min) or Metro line 14 | 15-20 min |
| Gare du Nord → Gare Montparnasse | Metro line 4 | 40-50 min |
Between 25 July and 16 August 2026, RER D is not running between Gare du Nord and Gare de Lyon due to engineering works. Use Metro line 5 during that period, or take a taxi. Add extra time, this disruption will affect connections that would otherwise be straightforward.
For high-stakes connections, international trains, overnight trains where there is no later departure, 90 minutes between arrival and departure is the safer target.
Reservations, what’s required on Paris trains
Every TGV Inoui, OUIGO, and Eurostar service requires a seat reservation. So do most Intercités. A reservation is either included in the ticket price or, for rail pass holders, an additional fee on top of the pass.
If you are travelling with an Interrail or Eurail pass, the pass covers the journey, but you still need to book and pay for a reservation separately on TGV Inoui, OUIGO, Eurostar, and most Intercités.
| Train type | Reservation required? | Where to book |
|---|---|---|
| TGV Inoui | Yes, included in ticket | SNCF Connect |
| OUIGO | Yes, included in ticket | ouigo.com |
| Eurostar | Yes, included in ticket | eurostar.com |
| Intercités (most routes) | Yes, included in ticket | SNCF Connect |
| Intercités de Nuit | Yes, fee by accommodation type | SNCF Connect |
| Intercités Normandy | Check per departure | SNCF Connect |
TGV Inoui tickets go on sale four months before departure. Prices are dynamic and rise as the train fills. Book early for the best TGV fares, not because it’s generic advice, but because the cheapest price bracket on a given train is the first to disappear.
For Intercités de Nuit overnight trains, book early if you want a couchette. Couchettes sell out before seats on popular routes in summer.
Before you book
Six stations, six directions. Before confirming any booking, open the train details and check the exact station name, not just the city. If your journey involves changing stations in Paris, allow at least 60 minutes. If you’re on OUIGO, your ticket names the departure station; go to that station. If you’re on Eurostar, arrive at the first-floor terminal at Gare du Nord with time to spare.
Match your destination to the direction table, confirm the station, then book.
Frequently asked questions
Which Paris train station is for Eurostar to London?
Eurostar trains to London St Pancras depart from Gare du Nord. The Eurostar terminal is on the first floor of the station, reached by escalator opposite platform 17. Arrive at least 60 to 90 minutes before departure, Eurostar requires passport control and security checks before boarding.
Which station do OUIGO trains depart from in Paris?
OUIGO low-cost trains use three stations in and around Paris: Gare de Bercy in central Paris, Massy-Palaiseau in the southwestern suburbs, and Marne-la-Vallee-Chessy near Disneyland Paris in the east. Your ticket will state which station your specific train departs from. Do not assume it is Gare du Nord or Gare de Lyon.
How long does it take to transfer from Gare du Nord to Gare de Lyon?
Allow 25 to 35 minutes door-to-door in normal conditions. The RER D ride between the two stations takes about 8 minutes, but walking to the platform, waiting, boarding, and exiting adds time. Note that between 25 July and 16 August 2026, RER D is not running between these stations due to engineering works, use Metro line 5 or a taxi during that period.
Which Paris station serves Bordeaux, Rennes, and Brittany?
TGV trains to Bordeaux, Rennes, Nantes, Brest, Toulouse, and other southwest and Atlantic coast destinations depart from Gare Montparnasse, in the 15th arrondissement on the south side of the city.
Do I need a reservation for TGV trains from Paris?
Yes. All TGV Inoui trains require a seat reservation. For regular ticket buyers, the reservation is included in the ticket price. If you are using an Interrail or Eurail pass, you still need to book and pay for a seat reservation separately. Tickets go on sale four months before departure and prices rise as the train fills.
Which Paris station serves Germany and Strasbourg?
TGV and ICE trains to Germany (Frankfurt, Munich, Stuttgart, Berlin) and Strasbourg depart from Gare de lEst. This is a separate station from Gare du Nord about 10 to 15 minutes walk or one stop on Metro line 4 or 5.
Is Gare du Nord the same as Gare de lEst?
No. They are two separate stations, though they are close to each other in the 10th arrondissement. Gare du Nord handles international trains to the UK, Netherlands, and Belgium. Gare de lEst handles trains to Germany, Alsace, and Luxembourg. If your journey involves both arriving from London and continuing to Germany you need to walk or take one Metro stop between the two.
Which Paris station has the overnight train to Barcelona?
The overnight Intercites de Nuit train to Barcelona departs from Gare dAusterlitz. It leaves at around 22:13 and arrives at Barcelona Sants the following afternoon around 14:00. The service runs on Friday and Saturday nights year-round, and daily from June through September. Reservations are mandatory.