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

# Paris to Copenhagen by Train

Paris to Copenhagen by train is a long but manageable journey through France, Germany and Denmark. There is no direct train, so the practical route is to travel from Paris into Germany, use Hamburg as the main connection point, and continue from Hamburg to Copenhagen Central.

## The Short Answer

There is no direct train from Paris to Copenhagen, but the route is straightforward once you split it into stages.

For most travellers, the journey looks like this:

LegTypical routeMain operatorsParis to GermanyParis Gare de l’Est to Frankfurt Main Hbf, or another German hubTGV INOUI and DB-SNCF Voyageurs in cooperationGermany to HamburgFrankfurt or another German hub to Hamburg HbfDeutsche BahnHamburg to CopenhagenHamburg Hbf to Copenhagen CentralDeutsche Bahn and DSBThe trip can work in one long day when the live timetable lines up. It is often calmer to stop overnight in Hamburg, especially if you are travelling with luggage, children, or a rail pass that needs separate reservations.

## The Best Route Via Germany

The easiest route is Paris Gare de l’Est to Germany, then Hamburg Hbf, then Copenhagen Central.

Paris to Frankfurt is a strong first leg because it has direct high-speed trains. SNCF Connect lists seven direct trains per day from Paris Gare de l’Est to Frankfurt Main Hbf, with a shortest journey time of 3 hours 49 minutes. TGV INOUI and DB-SNCF Voyageurs in cooperation serve the route.

From Frankfurt, continue north with Deutsche Bahn towards Hamburg Hbf. Depending on your date, a planner may instead route you through Cologne, Karlsruhe or Mannheim. That is normal. The important point is to reach Hamburg with enough time for the Denmark train.

Hamburg is the key connection. Deutsche Bahn advertises up to ten daily services from Hamburg to Copenhagen. From there, trains continue into Denmark and arrive at Copenhagen Central.

## One Day Or Overnight In Hamburg

A one-day Paris-Copenhagen train journey is possible on some dates, but it is not the most forgiving way to plan the trip.

If you want the fastest practical version, start early from Paris, keep the route through Germany simple, and avoid tight changes before the Hamburg-Copenhagen train. A small delay in Germany can matter because the journey crosses several rail networks.

For a more relaxed trip, take a daytime train from Paris to Hamburg, sleep in Hamburg, and continue to Copenhagen the next morning. This usually feels much easier than treating the whole route as one continuous sprint.

PlanBest forTrade-offOne long dayTravellers who want to avoid a hotel stopRequires careful live timetable checking and realistic transfer buffersOvernight in HamburgMost leisure travellersAdds a hotel night but reduces stressOvernight before CopenhagenTravellers who want a morning arrival in DenmarkWorks best if Hamburg accommodation is close to the station## Tickets And Fares

Price the trip in pieces rather than expecting one simple Paris-Copenhagen fare.

For the France-Germany leg, Deutsche Bahn advertises Germany-France ICE/TGV saver fares from EUR 24.99. SNCF Connect’s Paris-Frankfurt page shows fares from EUR 59, with prices varying by train, date, class and availability.

For the Germany-Denmark leg, Deutsche Bahn advertises Hamburg-Copenhagen from EUR 33.99. DB also says Denmark saver-fare tickets can be booked up to six months in advance and until shortly before departure.

Treat these as fare anchors, not a promise. The final price for Paris to Copenhagen by train depends on your travel date, how early you book, the route the planner gives you, and whether you buy through one site or split the journey into separate bookings.

A sensible booking order is:

- Check Hamburg-Copenhagen first, because that is the final cross-border leg into Denmark.
- Add the Paris-Germany leg with enough time to reach Hamburg.
- If the connection looks fragile, book an overnight stop in Hamburg instead of forcing the whole trip into one day.

## Interrail And Eurail Passes

Interrail and Eurail can work on Paris to Copenhagen, but the pass does not remove the need for reservations.

A Global Pass is the relevant pass type because the journey crosses several countries. A France One Country Pass or Denmark One Country Pass is not enough for the whole route.

For passholders, the important reservation rules are:

- Interrail lists Paris-Stuttgart, Paris-Munich and Paris-Frankfurt TGV/ICE services as mandatory-reservation trains.
- Interrail lists Hamburg-Copenhagen Eurocity Express and Railjet reservations as optional for most of the year, but required from 26 June to 31 August.
- DSB states that an Interrail pass is not valid as a seat reservation.
- DSB also notes that France has a limited number of seats for Interrailers on global and high-speed trains.

Do the reservation check before you build hotels around the route. A pass is useful here, but Paris-Copenhagen is not a fully hop-on, hop-off journey.

## Stations And Transfers

Station names matter on this route because booking engines may show several valid-looking options.

CityStation to useWhy it mattersParisParis Gare de l’EstMain station for the direct Paris-Frankfurt high-speed routeFrankfurtFrankfurt Main HbfCommon Germany entry point from ParisHamburgHamburg HbfMain connection point for Denmark-bound trainsCopenhagenCopenhagen CentralMain Copenhagen arrival station, well connected to Danish and international rail servicesLeave more transfer time than the minimum on a journey this long. A 10-minute change may be legal in a planner, but it is rarely comfortable when you still need to reach another country the same day.

## Booking Tips

Start with the live timetable, then build the trip around Hamburg.

If you see a one-day itinerary with tight German transfers, check the next Denmark departure as a backup. If the backup is much later, an overnight stop in Hamburg may be the better plan.

Book earlier for summer travel. Hamburg-Copenhagen reservations become mandatory for passholders from 26 June through 31 August, and long-distance international trains can become expensive close to departure.

For the core rail route, use SNCF or Deutsche Bahn for Paris-Germany, and Deutsche Bahn or DSB for Germany-Denmark. Resellers can be useful for comparing options, but the official operators are the best places to confirm current schedules, reservation rules and disruption notices.