Brandenburg Gate in Berlin at night Brandenburg Gate in Berlin at night

Copenhagen to Berlin by Train

Copenhagen to Berlin by train now has selected direct services in about seven hours, with Hamburg still useful as a fallback connection.

Train service

Train tickets

Copenhagen to Berlin by train is now much simpler than it used to be. Selected direct trains link Copenhagen H with Berlin in about seven hours, and the older one-change route via Hamburg still works well when the direct train is full, expensive, or badly timed for your date.

Copenhagen to Berlin by train at a glance

Copenhagen to Berlin is a practical same-day train journey, especially now that direct services have returned on the Prague-Berlin-Copenhagen route.

Item What to expect
Direct train Yes, on selected 2026 ComfortJet services between Copenhagen, Berlin, and Prague
Typical direct journey time About seven hours between Copenhagen and Berlin
Main fallback route Copenhagen to Hamburg, then Hamburg to Berlin
Main stations København H / Copenhagen Central and Berlin Hbf
Operators to check DSB, Deutsche Bahn, and České dráhy on the direct service
Early fare anchor DB lists longer Germany-Denmark Super Saver fares such as Berlin-Copenhagen from EUR 41.99
Booking window Denmark routes can usually be booked up to six months ahead online through DB
Rail passes Interrail or Eurail Global Pass can work, but check reservations for the exact train

This route changed in 2026, so be careful with older advice. Many guides still describe Copenhagen to Berlin as a journey that always needs a change in Hamburg. That is no longer the full story.

Direct trains from Copenhagen to Berlin

The direct Copenhagen-Berlin train is the first option to check because it removes the old Hamburg transfer from the journey.

The new route links Copenhagen, Berlin, Dresden, and Prague. Deutsche Bahn, DSB, and České dráhy are behind the service, and the trains use modern ComfortJet stock. The first direct Copenhagen-Berlin-Prague departure ran from Copenhagen H on 1 May 2026.

For travellers between Denmark and Germany, the key detail is simple: Copenhagen to Berlin takes about seven hours on the direct service. DSB also lists Danish boarding stops including Copenhagen H, Ringsted, Odense, Kolding, and Padborg.

Frequency needs a date check. Deutsche Bahn describes two direct Berlin-Copenhagen services per day from 1 May 2026. DSB's launch update says two daily departures are expected from mid-June, with an extra night-time departure in the summer months. Treat that as a reason to search your exact date, not as a reason to avoid the train.

The summer night-time train is useful to know about, but do not assume it is a classic sleeper train. The official sources describe a night-time connection, not a guaranteed sleeper with beds.

Copenhagen to Berlin via Hamburg

If the direct train does not work for your date, route via Hamburg.

This is the classic Copenhagen-Berlin rail route. You travel from Copenhagen H to Hamburg, then continue from Hamburg to Berlin. It adds a transfer, but it can still be useful when the direct train is sold out, when the fare is better, or when you want more choice of departure times.

DSB still describes Copenhagen to Berlin as possible in about seven hours with one change in Hamburg on some itineraries. That makes Hamburg a good fallback rather than a failure. If you have a tight onward connection in Berlin, choose a route with a sensible buffer.

Hamburg can also be a useful stopover. If you want a less pressured trip, spend a night there and continue to Berlin the next morning.

Tickets, fares, and booking

Book early, then compare the direct train with Hamburg-change options before you pay.

For official booking, start with DSB or Deutsche Bahn. DB's Super Saver Fare Europe Denmark page lists longer routes such as Berlin-Copenhagen from EUR 41.99, with online sales usually up to six months before departure. DSB's Berlin page explains that Orange Europa tickets are tied to the selected departure and cannot be changed or refunded.

Those prices are useful anchors, not promises. International rail fares change with demand, booking window, class, route, refund rules, and seller. A direct train may be the cleanest option. A Hamburg connection may be cheaper or better timed.

Rail Europe, Omio, and Trainline can help compare options in English, especially if you want to see several operators in one place. Before booking through any reseller, check fees, refund rules, seat reservation handling, and whether missed connections are protected.

Interrail, Eurail, and seat reservations

An Interrail or Eurail Global Pass can be a good fit if Copenhagen to Berlin is part of a bigger rail trip.

This is an international journey between Denmark and Germany, so a single-country pass is usually not the right tool. Use a Global Pass if you want pass coverage across both countries and beyond.

Reservations are the detail to check. Eurail lists Denmark among countries with little to no reservation requirements, while Germany is mostly optional but has summer caveats for many ICE trains from 1 June to 1 September. Cross-border trains and busy summer services can have their own rules. Always check the exact train in the Rail Planner app, DB, DSB, or the booking flow before assuming your pass alone is enough.

If you are travelling in peak summer, reserve a seat when the system allows it. It is easier to plan around a confirmed place than to improvise on a busy long-distance train.

Stations, luggage, bikes, and onboard planning

Most travellers should plan around Copenhagen H and Berlin Hbf.

Copenhagen H, also shown as København H, is the natural starting point in the Danish capital. Berlin Hbf is the main long-distance station in Berlin and gives easy onward access to the S-Bahn, U-Bahn, trams, regional trains, and taxis.

Pack for one long train day. Keep tickets, passport or ID, payment card, water, chargers, medicine, and any child or pet documents easy to reach. You may not need to change trains on the direct service, but the Hamburg route still involves at least one transfer.

Bike travel needs a separate check. DSB says bikes can be brought on most international trains, but reservations are needed for all trains. That does not mean every Copenhagen-Berlin departure has bike space. Search the exact train or contact DSB if the bike is essential.

Train, flight, or bus

The train is the easiest flight-free choice if you value city-centre travel and a single rail day.

The direct train avoids airports and puts you in the centre of Berlin. It is especially attractive if your hotel is near central Berlin, if you are travelling with children, or if you want the journey to be part of the trip rather than dead time between airports.

Flying can still be faster in the air. The real comparison is door to door: getting to the airport, security, boarding, baggage, arrival, and the trip into Berlin. The train is rarely the absolute fastest option, but it is often the calmer one.

Buses can be cheaper on some dates, but they are not the same travel experience. For most rail-minded travellers, the decision is between the direct train and a Hamburg-change train, not between train and bus.

Best choice by traveller type

Choose the route around your date, fare, and tolerance for transfers.

Traveller type Best choice Why
Wants the simplest trip Direct Copenhagen-Berlin ComfortJet No Hamburg change on selected services
Wants the lowest fare Compare direct and Hamburg-change trains early Dynamic fares can make either option cheaper
Travelling in peak summer Book early and check reservations Seats and lower fares can disappear
Using Interrail or Eurail Global Pass plus exact-train reservation check Pass coverage does not remove every reservation rule
Travelling with a bike Check the exact train before booking International bike spaces need reservation and can vary
Wants a relaxed journey Add a Hamburg stopover Less pressure if timings or fares are awkward

If the direct train is available at a good fare, take it. If not, the Hamburg route is still a sensible backup.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a direct train from Copenhagen to Berlin?

Yes. Direct Copenhagen-Berlin trains returned in 2026 as part of the Prague-Berlin-Copenhagen route operated in cooperation by DSB, Deutsche Bahn, and České dráhy.

How long does Copenhagen to Berlin by train take?

The direct train takes about seven hours between Copenhagen and Berlin. Some Hamburg-change options can be similar, but exact times vary by date.

How many trains run from Copenhagen to Berlin?

The direct service is limited compared with domestic routes. DB describes two direct Berlin-Copenhagen services per day, while DSB's May 2026 launch update says two daily departures are expected from mid-June and an extra night-time departure runs in summer. Search your exact travel date before planning around a specific frequency.

Is there a sleeper train from Copenhagen to Berlin?

There is a summer night-time connection on the Copenhagen-Berlin-Prague route, but official sources do not describe it as a full sleeper train with beds. Treat it as a night train to check by date, not as a guaranteed sleeper.

How much is the train from Copenhagen to Berlin?

DB lists longer Germany-Denmark Super Saver fares such as Berlin-Copenhagen from EUR 41.99. These are advance "from" prices, so the fare for your date can be higher.

Can I use Interrail or Eurail from Copenhagen to Berlin?

Yes, use an Interrail or Eurail Global Pass for a Denmark-Germany route. Check the exact train for reservation requirements, especially in summer or on busy cross-border services.

Where should I book Copenhagen to Berlin train tickets?

Start with DSB or Deutsche Bahn for official booking. Use Rail Europe, Omio, or Trainline if you want reseller comparison, but check fees, refund rules, and seat reservation handling before paying.