---
title: "Trains in France: How to Choose, Book, and Ride Them"
date: 2026-05-03
author: "Johan E. Johansson"
featured_image: "https://everyrail.com/wp-content/uploads/france.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Countries"
    url: "/countries.md"
---

# Trains in France: How to Choose, Book, and Ride Them

France is one of the easiest countries in Europe to explore by rail, but the train names matter. The quickest way to plan is to separate French trains into five groups: TGV INOUI for fast city-to-city trips, OUIGO for cheaper high-speed or classic-line trips, TER for regional journeys, INTERCITÉS for long-distance conventional routes, and international high-speed trains for cross-border travel.

For most visitors, the practical choice is simple. Use TGV INOUI when speed, comfort, and flexibility matter. Use OUIGO when the lowest fare matters and you are comfortable paying extra for some services. Use TER for shorter regional services and day trips. Use INTERCITÉS or Intercités de Nuit when the route is not on a high-speed line or when an overnight train fits the trip.

## French trains at a glance

The French rail system is easiest to understand by train type, because each type has different rules for booking, reservations, fares, and luggage.

Train typeBest forWhat to watchTGV INOUIFast long-distance trips between major citiesSeat reservations, dynamic fares, station choiceOUIGO Grande VitesseLow-cost high-speed tripsPaid extras, stricter luggage and flexibility rulesOUIGO Train ClassiqueCheaper classic-line trips on selected routesSlower journey times and limited routesTERRegional services within the regions of FranceLocal fare rules and occasional reservation exceptionsINTERCITÉSLong-distance conventional routesSome routes require reservationsIntercités de NuitOvernight travel on selected routesReservations and sleeper/couchette availabilityInternational high-speed trainsCross-border trips from FranceMandatory reservations and operator-specific rulesSNCF Connect is the official consumer booking channel for French train tickets. Resellers can still be useful, especially when comparing multi-country routes or using payment methods that work better for you, but the fare rules come from the operator behind the ticket.

## The main train types in France

The name on the ticket tells you more than the route: it usually tells you the speed, service level, flexibility, and reservation rules.

### TGV INOUI

TGV INOUI is the main high-speed comfort product for long-distance travel in France. TGV trains can run at up to 320 km/h on French high-speed lines, which is why routes such as Paris to Lyon, Marseille, Bordeaux, Strasbourg, and Lille are usually train-first journeys rather than flight-first journeys.

Use TGV INOUI when you care about speed, onboard comfort, and flexible ticket options. Typical features include reserved seats, Wi-Fi on many services, power sockets, luggage space, first class, and a bar or catering option on many trains. TGV INOUI is also the product to check first for major domestic routes and many international routes from France.

### OUIGO

OUIGO is SNCF’s low-fare train brand. OUIGO Grande Vitesse uses high-speed trains, while OUIGO Train Classique uses conventional lines on selected routes. The tradeoff is that OUIGO keeps the base fare lower by making more things optional.

As of May 31, 2026, SNCF Voyageurs listed OUIGO Grande Vitesse fares from €19, with children’s tickets at €8, and OUIGO Train Classique from €10 to a maximum of €59, with children’s tickets at €5. Treat those as fare anchors, not a promise for every date. The useful rule is to book early, compare the total price after extras, and check whether luggage, seat choice, Wi-Fi, or flexibility matters for your trip.

### TER

TER services are regional trains and coaches operated by SNCF with the regions of France. They are the trains you use for regional day trips, smaller cities, local connections, and slower scenic alternatives when a high-speed route is sold out or too expensive.

TER is often the simplest option once you are already inside a region, but do not assume every regional service has the same rules. Prices, discounts, and booking windows can depend on the region. Certain regional services also have reservation rules, so pass users should still check the route before boarding.

### INTERCITÉS and night trains

INTERCITÉS covers classic long-distance trains that are not TGV services. They connect cities, coastal areas, mountain regions, and routes where high-speed rail is not the main answer. INTERCITÉS serves France day and night to more than 140 destinations.

Intercités de Nuit is the overnight branch. It can be useful when the alternative is a very long daytime journey, an expensive high-speed itinerary, or a pass route with scarce seat reservations. Night trains need reservations, and the most useful berths can sell out, so they belong in the “book early” category.

### International high-speed trains

France also has major cross-border trains. Eurostar links France with London, Brussels, Amsterdam, and other cities. TGV Lyria links France and Switzerland. TGV INOUI and partner services link France with Spain, Italy, Germany, Luxembourg, and Belgium on selected routes.

These trains are not just domestic French trains with a longer route. They often have their own fare rules, ticket names, luggage rules, and pass reservation limits. Check the operator and the exact station before assuming the domestic rule applies.

## Tickets, fares, and booking windows

Long-distance French train tickets reward early planning, but the cheapest ticket is not always the best ticket.

Under normal circumstances, French train tickets can be bought up to four months in advance. For the 2026 summer period, TGV INOUI and INTERCITÉS services for July 4 to December 12, 2026 opened for sale on March 11, 2026, while OUIGO Train Classique France tickets were available 60 days before departure. TER bookings opened three to five months before departure, depending on the region. Those windows were current as of May 31, 2026 and can change, particularly when engineering works affect a route.

Those dates matter because French fares are dynamic on many long-distance trains. A Paris to Marseille TGV INOUI ticket bought early can be a very different product from a last-minute ticket on the same route. OUIGO can be cheaper, but only if its schedule, station, luggage allowance, and flexibility rules match what you need.

The main booking choices are:

Booking choiceBest useWatch-outSNCF ConnectOfficial French train booking and clear operator rulesSome travellers may still prefer a reseller for multi-country comparisonResellersComparing operators, routes, and payment optionsFare names and currencies can be localized by the sellerEurail or Interrail passMulti-country travel or flexible rail-heavy tripsPaid reservations are common on French high-speed trainsRegional TER sites or appsLocal regional fares and discountsRules vary by regionIf you will make several long-distance French trips, check whether a discount card makes sense. As of May 31, 2026, Carte Avantage cost €49 and offered 30% discounts under youth, adult, and senior conditions on eligible TGV INOUI and INTERCITÉS journeys. It is not a universal tourist discount. It is worth checking only when your age, route, timing, and fare conditions fit.

## Seat reservations and rail passes

Rail passes can be useful in France, but they do not remove the need to think about reservations.

Many French trains need reservations in advance when travelling with Eurail or Interrail. Most French high-speed trains and night trains can be reserved up to two months in advance, and popular services can sell out around summer and public holidays.

For pass users, the important split is:

Train typePass reservation patternPractical adviceTGVReservation required on pass travelReserve early on popular routesINTERCITÉSSome routes compulsory, some recommendedCheck the exact train before travelIntercités de NuitReservation requiredBook early for couchettes or sleepersTERUsually easier for pass travelCheck regional exceptionsEurostar and other international trainsReservation required or quota-limitedBook early, especially on London, Brussels, Amsterdam, and Barcelona routesAs of May 31, 2026, French TGV pass reservations were €10 to €20 in both second and first class. INTERCITÉS routes with compulsory reservations were also €10 to €20. Specific regional exceptions included TER Nomad in Normandy at €2.50 and TER Fluo in Grand Est at €1.70.

The reader-friendly takeaway is this: a pass is not automatically bad in France, but it is not as frictionless as in countries where domestic long-distance reservations are optional. If your trip is mostly Paris to Lyon, Paris to Marseille, Paris to Bordeaux, Paris to Nice, or Paris to Barcelona, compare pass days plus reservations against normal point-to-point tickets before buying the pass.

## Stations, airports, and route planning

In France, station choice matters. Paris alone has several mainline train stations, and the correct station depends on the direction of travel and the train type.

Common patterns include Paris Gare de Lyon for many southeast routes such as Lyon, Marseille, and Nice; Paris Nord for northern and Eurostar routes; Paris Montparnasse for many western and southwestern routes such as Bordeaux; Paris Est, also called Gare de l’Est, for eastern routes including Strasbourg and services toward Germany; Paris Austerlitz for some classic and night-train routes; and Paris Bercy for some slower or regional-style departures.

Charles de Gaulle Airport is not just an airport transfer point. Charles de Gaulle Airport 2 TGV is a long-distance train station at the airport. That can be useful if you are connecting from a flight to a city outside Paris, but it is not a reason to ignore central Paris stations. Always compare the airport-station option with the city-station option before booking.

Good route planning starts with three checks:

TripLikely first train type to checkStation watch-outParis to Lyon, Marseille, or NiceTGV INOUI or OUIGOOften Paris Gare de Lyon, but check the ticketParis to BordeauxTGV INOUI or OUIGOOften Paris MontparnasseParis to Lille, Brussels, Amsterdam, or LondonTGV, Eurostar, or partner serviceOften Paris NordParis to Strasbourg or GermanyTGV INOUI, ICE, or partner serviceOften Paris Est / Gare de l’EstRegional day tripTERUse the regional station named on the ticketAirport to a French cityTGV from Charles de Gaulle Airport 2 TGV if availableCompare with a transfer into ParisDo not rely on “Paris” alone. A ticket from Paris Nord does not depart from Paris Gare de Lyon, and changing stations can take real time.

## Practical rules before you ride

The biggest practical mistakes are booking the wrong fare type, carrying the wrong luggage for the train, or assuming every French train has the same rules.

TGV INOUI’s baggage rules were last updated on December 2, 2025. As of May 31, 2026, each traveller could take two labelled baggage items up to 70 × 90 × 50 cm plus one labelled hand item up to 40 × 30 × 15 cm. A space for an assembled bike had to be reserved when buying the ticket, at €10 per bike per journey. Non-compliant or excess baggage could lead to a minimum charge of €50 per item.

OUIGO is more restrictive. The base fare includes a smaller luggage allowance, while larger bags, seat choice, Wi-Fi, and some comfort options can cost extra depending on the fare. That is why the cheapest-looking OUIGO ticket needs a total-price check before you book.

Pets also need attention. As of May 31, 2026, a pet ticket on TGV INOUI cost €7, except for guide dogs, and OUIGO pet tickets cost €10. Small-pet carrier dimensions and rules differ by service, so check the exact train before travelling with an animal.

Flexibility is another difference. TGV INOUI is usually the better fit when you might need to exchange or cancel. OUIGO is usually the better fit when you are sure of the train and want the lowest total fare. TER can be easier for spontaneous regional travel, but regional fare rules still apply.

## Choosing the right train for your trip

The best train in France depends on the job you need it to do.

Traveller jobBest first choiceWhyFast trip between major citiesTGV INOUISpeed, comfort, flexibility, and broad route coverageLowest possible long-distance fareOUIGOLower base fare when the schedule and extras workRegional day tripTERLocal coverage across the regions of FranceClassic long-distance routeINTERCITÉSUseful beyond the high-speed networkOvernight journeyIntercités de NuitSaves a hotel night when the route fitsMulti-country rail tripEurail/Interrail plus reservationsFlexible, but only after checking French reservation feesAirport-to-region connectionCharles de Gaulle Airport 2 TGV if availableCan avoid crossing Paris on some itinerariesCross-border high-speed tripEurostar, TGV Lyria, ICE/TGV, or TGV INOUIOperator-specific rules matterA good booking workflow is: choose the city pair, identify the station, compare TGV INOUI, OUIGO, TER, and INTERCITÉS where they exist, check reservation or luggage rules, then compare the final price. For pass travel, add the reservation fee and availability check before deciding that a pass day is a good value.

French trains are not hard to use. The trick is to treat the train name as part of the booking decision, not as decoration on the ticket.