---
title: "Budapest to Rome by Train"
date: 2026-05-04
author: "Johan E. Johansson"
featured_image: "https://everyrail.com/wp-content/uploads/italy.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Routes"
    url: "/routes.md"
---

# Budapest to Rome by Train

Budapest to Rome by train is possible, but it is not a direct journey. The simplest rail plan for most travellers is Budapest to Vienna by day, then the ÖBB Nightjet from Vienna to Rome. If the sleeper does not fit your date, budget, or comfort needs, you can also travel by day through Austria into northern Italy and continue to Rome on Italian high-speed trains.

## Budapest to Rome by train at a glance

Budapest to Rome is a long international rail trip, so plan it around connections rather than one simple train.

ItemWhat to expectDirect trainNo direct Budapest to Rome train in current public booking evidenceTypical faster rail timingAround 14-17 hours on better public timetable examplesSimplest route ideaBudapest to Vienna, then ÖBB Nightjet to RomeDaytime alternativeBudapest to Vienna, then Austria to northern Italy and onward to RomeMain operators to checkÖBB, ÖBB Nightjet, Trenitalia, ItaloRail passInterrail or Eurail Global Pass, with paid reservations on key trainsBest booking approachCheck your exact date before paying, because times, changes, and prices varyThe main point is the lack of a direct train. Booking engines can show different change counts by date, but you should expect at least one major transfer and often more. If you want the least tiring rail plan, start by checking the Vienna to Rome Nightjet.

## The best route for most travellers

The cleanest Budapest to Rome rail route is Budapest to Vienna by daytime train, followed by the ÖBB Nightjet from Vienna to Rome.

Vienna works as the natural handover point. Railjet routes include Budapest and Vienna, and ÖBB Nightjet reaches Rome from Vienna. That means you can handle the first leg in daylight and let the longest leg happen overnight.

Avoid a tight same-evening connection if you are buying separate tickets. A delay on the Budapest to Vienna leg can leave you exposed if your Nightjet reservation is on a separate booking. If the sleeper matters, give yourself a generous buffer in Vienna or book an itinerary with protected connections where available.

### Budapest to Vienna

Use a daytime train from Budapest to Vienna and follow the exact station names on your ticket.

Railjet is the main branded long-distance service to know on this corridor. ÖBB describes Railjet as a service connecting Austria with countries including Hungary and Italy, and Interrail lists a Railjet route between Munich, Salzburg, Linz, Vienna, and Budapest.

For an overnight connection, aim to reach Vienna early enough to handle a delay, buy food if needed, and find the Nightjet platform. A cheaper ticket is not helpful if the transfer is too tight for a long international journey.

### Vienna to Rome by Nightjet

The Vienna to Rome Nightjet is the train that makes the route practical for many travellers.

ÖBB Nightjet lists Rome as a destination from Vienna, Salzburg, Villach, and Munich. Interrail also lists a Nightjet route from Vienna via Villach and Florence to Rome. Nightjet accommodation types include seats, couchettes, sleepers, and Mini Cabins on routes where the newer trainsets are used.

Seats are usually the lowest-comfort option on a night train. A couchette gives you a place to lie down. A sleeper gives more privacy. Mini Cabins are another option on new-generation Nightjet services, including Vienna to Rome in the official Nightjet notes.

Reservations are compulsory on Nightjet services. Interrail notes that Nightjet reservation prices are dynamic and advises booking as early as possible, especially for travel between May and September. Check the Nightjet before you build the rest of the itinerary around it.

## Daytime train alternatives

Daytime trains are useful if the Nightjet is full, too expensive, or not how you want to travel.

The broad daytime plan is to travel from Budapest through Austria into northern Italy, then use Italian high-speed trains for the final part to Rome. Railjet routes link Austria with Italy, including routes toward Venice and Trieste. In Italy, Trenitalia Frecciarossa and Italo are the main high-speed brands to compare for Rome connections.

This route can work well if you want a stopover in Vienna, Venice, Bologna, or Florence. It is less appealing if you need the fastest possible city-to-city journey. A daytime route can involve several separate legs, so a slightly slower connection with safer transfer times can be better than a fragile one.

If you use a daytime route, check the number of changes, the transfer time at each station, whether each ticket is train-specific, and whether the itinerary arrives at Roma Termini or Roma Tiburtina.

## Tickets and booking strategy

Book as early as your dates allow, especially if you want a couchette, sleeper, Mini Cabin, or lower advance fare.

For the overnight route, start with Nightjet or ÖBB for the Vienna to Rome leg. Then check Budapest to Vienna separately if the through journey is awkward or expensive. For daytime Italy legs, compare Trenitalia and Italo. Resellers such as Rail Europe, Omio, and Trainline can be useful for comparing route options, but review fees, refund rules, and connection protection before paying.

Be careful with advertised “from” prices. Budapest to Rome crosses several countries and operators, so a low fare can depend on the date, seller, comfort category, and exact leg. Treat fare examples as a starting point, not a promise.

If you split tickets, keep the risk in mind. A missed connection between separate bookings can mean buying a new ticket or losing a sleeper reservation. If a connection is essential, allow enough time that a moderate delay does not ruin the trip.

## Interrail and Eurail passes

An Interrail or Eurail Global Pass can work for Budapest to Rome, but it does not make the whole trip reservation-free.

The route crosses Hungary, Austria, and Italy, so a Global Pass is the relevant pass type for this international journey. The important extra cost is reservations. Interrail states that seat reservations are not included in the pass, and that most high-speed trains and all night trains require reservations.

For the Nightjet, you need a paid reservation or accommodation supplement. Italian high-speed trains also commonly require reservations for pass holders. Before using a pass day, compare the pass-day value plus reservations with point-to-point tickets for your exact date.

## Stations, luggage, and transfer planning

Follow the station names on your ticket, because both the Budapest departure and Rome arrival can vary by itinerary.

For the overnight route, Vienna Hbf is the key transfer station. In Rome, many itineraries use Roma Termini, while some may use Roma Tiburtina. Choose based on the train you book and where you are staying.

Pack so transfers are easy. Keep passports, tickets, chargers, medicine, and overnight items easy to reach. On a couchette or sleeper, you will not want to unpack a full suitcase in the compartment.

If you are arriving in Rome with a same-day tour or onward train, build in a buffer. Overnight trains are useful, but they are still long-distance services and can be delayed.

## Train, bus, or flight

Take the train if the journey itself matters; compare flights if speed is the priority.

Budapest to Rome is a long rail route. The train is more comfortable than a long coach ride for many travellers, avoids airport transfers, and works well if you want to stop in Vienna or northern Italy.

Flying is often faster for the city pair once the rail journey time is compared with direct air service and airport time. A coach may be cheaper on some dates, but it is a long overland journey. For rail-minded travellers, the real choice is usually between the Nightjet route and a deliberate stopover.

## Best choice by traveller type

Choose the route based on how you handle long travel days, not only the theoretical fastest timing.

Traveller typeBest choiceWhyWants the simplest rail planBudapest to Vienna, then Nightjet to RomeOne clear transfer strategy and the longest leg happens overnightWants proper restNightjet couchette, Mini Cabin, or sleeperThese options let you lie down or get more privacy than a seatWants daylight travelDaytime route through Austria and northern ItalyMore time awake in transit, with possible stopoversHas fixed dates from May to SeptemberSearch Nightjet earlyInterrail advises early booking for Nightjet in this periodUses Interrail or EurailGlobal Pass plus reservationsThe route crosses three countries, and key trains need reservationsNeeds the fastest arrivalCompare flightsRail is possible, but it remains a long journeyIf you are flexible, search several dates. A one-day shift can change the price, sleeper availability, transfer quality, and arrival station.