---
title: "Berlin to Venice by Train: Route, Tickets and Tips"
date: 2026-05-04
author: "Johan E. Johansson"
featured_image: "https://everyrail.com/wp-content/uploads/italy.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Routes"
    url: "/routes.md"
---

# Berlin to Venice by Train: Route, Tickets and Tips

Berlin to Venice by train is a full-day journey, not a simple hop. The easiest plan is to travel from [Berlin Hbf](https://everyrail.com/destinations/train-stations-in-berlin/) to [Munich Hbf](https://everyrail.com/destinations/train-stations-in-munich/), then continue over the Brenner route to [Venezia Santa Lucia](https://everyrail.com/destinations/trains-to-venice/). Expect at least one change and a long day on board. The payoff is one of the best arrivals in Europe, when the train crosses the lagoon into Venice.

The route suits travellers who want to skip flying and make the journey part of the trip. Details matter here. You need the right Venice station, a realistic connection in Munich, and a clear plan for tickets or pass supplements.

## The short answer

Berlin to Venice typically takes between 11 and 12 hours with at least one change.

The most practical route:

LegUsual patternWhy it worksBerlin Hbf to Munich HbfICE or other DB long-distance trainFastest way to reach the Germany-Italy corridorMunich Hbf to VeniceRailjet, EuroCity, or Frecciarossa over the Brenner routeDirect cross-border service via Innsbruck, Verona, and VeniceBook to Venezia Santa Lucia if you are staying in Venice itself. [Venezia Mestre](https://everyrail.com/destinations/train-stations-in-venice/) works for mainland hotels, but it is not the island station.

## Best route via Munich and the Brenner Pass

The best plan is [Berlin to Munich](https://everyrail.com/routes/berlin-to-munich-by-train/), then Munich to Venice over the Brenner Pass.

Take a [Deutsche Bahn](https://everyrail.com/train-companies/deutsche-bahn/) ICE from Berlin to Munich Hbf. From Munich, the main cross-border option is the ÖBB Railjet, which runs through Innsbruck and the Brenner corridor before reaching Verona and Venice. Trenitalia also operates Frecciarossa trains on this corridor. They tend to be faster on the Italian leg, but carry different booking rules for pass holders.

Leave Berlin early. A morning departure gives you the best chance of reaching Venice the same evening. If you have a choice of connections in Munich, avoid the tightest one. Allow at least 20 to 30 minutes in Munich Hbf, more if the ICE is running late. It is a large station and international trains can leave from distant platforms.

## Journey time and changes

The Berlin-Munich leg on ICE takes around 4 hours. Munich to Venice on Railjet or EuroCity takes around 6 hours 30 minutes to 7 hours. Add connection time in Munich and the full trip runs to roughly 11 to 12 hours. That is a realistic range. Do not plan tight onward connections in Venice based on the best-case end.

The cleanest booking is one Berlin Hbf to Venezia Santa Lucia search. If that does not show a sensible one-change option, try the legs separately:

- Berlin Hbf to Munich Hbf
- Munich Hbf to Venezia Santa Lucia
- Munich Hbf to Venezia Mestre, then Mestre to Santa Lucia if needed

Searching separately also helps you see whether the Munich connection is comfortable or a dash.

## Tickets, fares, and booking windows

Book early and compare DB, ÖBB, and established resellers. Berlin-Venice fares shift with date, demand, and availability.

DB sells Germany-Italy international saver fares. On some routes, advance options start from around €19.99, but do not treat that as a guaranteed Berlin-Venice price. The full trip crosses three countries and can price much higher, especially on popular dates or when availability is limited.

Fares vary a lot by how far ahead you book. Advance purchases give you more options and better prices. Last-minute fares can cost significantly more. DB and ÖBB generally open bookings up to six months ahead; searching earlier may show nothing yet.

Booking routeGood forWatch out forDBThrough tickets from Germany to Italy and DB Navigator convenienceInternational options may price differently by route or dateÖBBRailjet, Sparschiene, and Nightjet-related optionsMake sure the search returns the correct Venice stationRail Europe, Trainline, or OmioComparing availability, currencies, and payment methodsCheck fees, ticket conditions, and whether the connection is protected[Interrail](https://everyrail.com/rail-passes/interrail/global-pass/) or [Eurail Global Pass](https://everyrail.com/rail-passes/eurail/global-pass/)Multi-country trips covering several rail daysBrenner route supplement applies; see below## Interrail and Eurail passes

A [Global Pass](https://everyrail.com/rail-passes/interrail/global-pass/) covers Berlin to Venice across three countries, but the Brenner route carries a passholder supplement. Budget for it.

On Railjet and Railjet Xpress trains crossing between Austria and Italy on the Brenner route, the supplement is €10 in second class, €15 in first class, and €30 in business class. Buying it on board costs an extra €5. Book in advance. Fees can change, so check the current supplement on the Interrail or Eurail website before booking.

Seat reservations on the Brenner international route are optional, but worth taking. This corridor fills up on busy travel days and standing through the Alpine section is not the saving it sounds like.

If your Munich-Venice train is a Frecciarossa, a separate seat reservation is required, and the fee differs from the Railjet supplement. Check the Interrail or Eurail reservation fee for your specific train before booking.

Do not try to use a pass on Italo. Italo is a private Italian operator that does not accept Interrail or Eurail. This matters if you extend your trip within Italy after reaching Venice.

Use a Global Pass rather than a one-country pass. Germany, Austria, and Italy are all on this route. A single-country pass will not cover the whole journey.

## Station tips for Berlin and Venice

Start at Berlin Hbf. Book Venezia Santa Lucia for Venice proper.

Two stations serve Venice, and booking the wrong one is an easy mistake to make. Venezia Santa Lucia is on the island, at the west end of the Grand Canal. You step out beside the water, with vaporetto stops a short walk from the platforms. That is the arrival most people picture when they choose the train.

Venezia Mestre is on the mainland. Choose it only if your hotel is genuinely there, or if you are making an onward connection. From Mestre, you still need a train, bus, or taxi to reach the island.

If a booking page shows only “Venice”, open the train details and confirm the station before you pay. It is a common mistake and an expensive one to fix on the day.

Venice charges a visitor access fee on busy days, typically spring and summer weekends and public holidays. Overnight guests are generally exempt. The rules change each year, so check the official Venice access fee site before your visit.

## Overnight and slower alternatives

There is no direct Nightjet from Berlin to Venice. Do not plan for one.

From Berlin, Nightjet trains serve Vienna and Innsbruck. Neither is Venice. If you want to piece together an overnight route from Berlin toward Venice, one option is to take the Nightjet to Vienna, then travel south to Venice the next day. A Nightjet from Vienna to Venice does exist, but this makes the journey a two-stage overnight plan, not a single booking from Berlin.

The Nightjet from Berlin to Innsbruck is another staging option if you want to sleep on the way south, connecting onward by day train through Verona to Venice. Check the current Nightjet timetable carefully, as routes and availability change.

For most travellers, the cleaner answer is the daytime route via Munich.

## Practical booking tips

Search the whole trip first, then check the connection time is realistic.

A good itinerary has a Munich transfer of at least 20 to 30 minutes, a confirmed arrival at Venezia Santa Lucia, and ticket conditions you understand before you pay. If you split the booking into separate Berlin-Munich and Munich-Venice tickets, you lose through-ticket missed-connection protection. Only split if the savings justify the risk on your exact date.

Pack appropriately for a journey with one change. Standard DB luggage rules apply on the Berlin-Munich leg; check DB’s current luggage guidance before you travel, as rules can vary by train type. Packing light always helps when you are transferring platforms.

The right search for most visitors is Berlin Hbf to Venezia Santa Lucia. Get that detail right and the rest of the trip is straightforward.