---
title: "Rome 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"
---

# Rome to Copenhagen by Train

Rome to Copenhagen by train is possible, but it is not a direct journey. Treat it as a long international rail trip across Italy, Germany, and Denmark, with either an overnight train in the middle or a planned stopover to keep the route comfortable.

## Rome to Copenhagen by Train at a Glance

Rome to Copenhagen is a full-day-plus rail journey, so the best plan is the one with safe connections, not the one with the shortest advertised time.

ItemWhat to expectDirect trainNo direct Rome to Copenhagen train in current public route dataJourney-time examples from route searchesPublic examples range from about 23h09 to 24h02, while one fastest result is around 16 hours and may be fragileDistance shown by route pagesAbout 1,532 to 1,534 kmMain overnight optionRome to Munich by OBB Nightjet, then daytime trains through Germany and DenmarkDaytime alternativeRome to Milan, then Switzerland or Germany toward Hamburg and CopenhagenMain operators to checkTrenitalia, Italo, OBB Nightjet, Deutsche Bahn, and DSBRail passInterrail or Eurail Global Pass, with paid reservations on key trainsBest booking approachSecure the sleeper or longest reserved leg first, then build safe connections around itPublic booking searches show that the route is searchable as a train journey, but the fastest examples should not be treated as the itinerary every traveller should copy. A multi-country route can change by date, engineering work, sleeper availability, transfer rules, and how much risk the booking engine accepts.

## The Best Route for Most Travellers

The most practical plan is to use the Rome to Munich Nightjet if it fits your date, then continue north through Germany to Hamburg and Copenhagen.

This route gives you a clear overnight spine. You leave Rome in the evening, sleep through a large part of the distance, and continue north the next day. It is still a long journey, but it is easier to manage than trying to stitch together the fastest possible daytime connections.

Start by checking the Nightjet first. If the sleeper is available at a price and comfort level you can accept, build the rest of the trip around it. If it is sold out, too expensive, or does not run in a way that works for your date, switch to a stopover route through northern Italy, Switzerland, or Germany.

### Rome to Munich by Nightjet

The Rome to Munich Nightjet is the train that makes this route feel practical for many rail-first travellers.

Nightjet lists Rome as a destination served from Munich, Vienna, Salzburg, and Villach. Interrail's Italy train guide also lists Rome to Munich or Vienna by OBB Nightjet as an overnight route of around 13 hours with required reservations.

Check the exact departure station on your ticket. Long-distance searches may use Roma Termini or Roma Tiburtina depending on the train and date. Do not assume the station from a generic route page.

Nightjet accommodation usually means choosing between seats, couchettes, sleepers, and, on new-generation services where available, Mini Cabins. A seat is the cheapest but least restful choice. A couchette gives you a bunk. A sleeper gives more privacy. A Mini Cabin can be useful for solo travellers when it is offered on your train.

Reservations are compulsory on Nightjet and prices are dynamic. Book early if you want a couchette, sleeper, or Mini Cabin, especially from May to September.

### Munich to Hamburg and Copenhagen

From Munich, the aim is to reach northern Germany and then Copenhagen with enough margin for delays.

Deutsche Bahn is the main operator to check for the German long-distance legs. Hamburg is the useful northern hub to watch because Nightjet lists Hamburg–Copenhagen as an eligible feeder or connecting-train ticket when combined with eligible Nightjet tickets.

DSB is the Danish operator and ticket source to check for the final section into Copenhagen. DSB also warns travellers to check itineraries before departure because track work in Denmark and Germany can affect journeys. That warning matters on this route.

If your Rome–Munich sleeper arrives late or the Munich–Hamburg section looks fragile, add a stopover. Hamburg and Munich are both sensible places to break the trip. A hotel night can be cheaper than missing a reserved long-distance train and buying a replacement ticket.

## Daytime Routes Through Northern Italy and Switzerland or Germany

Daytime routes are useful if the Nightjet is full, too expensive, or not the style of trip you want.

The broad daytime plan is Rome to northern Italy, then onward through Switzerland or Germany, then Hamburg and Copenhagen. This works best when you are happy to add a stopover. It is less relaxing if you try to force it into the shortest possible chain of connections.

Rome to Milan is the most obvious first leg for many daytime routes. Trenitalia's Frecciarossa network covers the Rome–Florence–Bologna–Milan corridor and reaches up to 300 km/h. Interrail lists the Rome–Milan high-speed journey at around 3 hours. Italo can also be worth checking on major Italian high-speed routes.

From Milan, some searches continue toward Switzerland, using Zurich or Basel as a gateway toward Germany. Others route through Germany more directly. The exact best option changes by date, timetable, and how the booking engine handles transfers.

The daytime option can be scenic and easier to recover from if you split it with a night in Milan, Zurich, Basel, Munich, or Hamburg. The trade-off is time. You will spend more waking hours in transit and may need more separate tickets.

## Tickets, Prices, and Booking Strategy

Book the hard-to-replace train first, then build the rest of the journey around it.

For the Nightjet route, start with OBB or Nightjet for the Rome to Munich sleeper. Nightjet tickets can generally be bought 180 days before departure, although annual timetable-change periods can open differently. Fares depend on capacity, so the price can change as spaces sell.

Once the sleeper is confirmed, check German long-distance trains with Deutsche Bahn and the final Denmark leg with DSB. For Italian high-speed legs, compare Trenitalia and Italo. Rail Europe, Trainline, and Omio can be useful for comparing multi-operator options, but check fees, refund rules, and whether missed connections are protected before paying.

Be careful with low "from" prices. Public route pages show useful fare examples, but those are search results for a specific date, seller, and ticket type. Your price depends on booking window, route, comfort category, season, refund flexibility, and whether you split tickets.

If you split tickets, protect the important connection. A missed daytime train is annoying. A missed sleeper or last northbound connection can derail the whole trip.

## Interrail and Eurail Passes

An Interrail or Eurail Global Pass can work for Rome to Copenhagen, but it does not remove reservation costs.

This route crosses several countries, so a Global Pass is the relevant pass type. A pass can make sense if Rome to Copenhagen is one part of a longer European rail trip. It is less clearly valuable if this is your only major train journey.

Nightjet requires reservations for pass holders. 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.

The pass is strongest when you value flexibility on daytime legs. It is weaker when the trip depends on a fixed sleeper, because that sleeper still needs a specific paid reservation.

## Stations, Luggage, and Connection Planning

Follow the station names on your tickets and leave more time than the fastest search result suggests.

In Rome, check whether your train leaves from Roma Termini or Roma Tiburtina. In Italy, Milano Centrale may appear on daytime routes. In Germany, München Hbf and Hamburg Hbf are the stations to watch if you use the Nightjet plan. In Copenhagen, the usual city-centre target is Copenhagen H.

Pack for several transfers. Keep passports, payment cards, tickets, chargers, medicine, and overnight items easy to reach. On a couchette, sleeper, or Mini Cabin, you do not want to unpack a full suitcase in a small compartment.

Build buffers into the plan. DSB specifically warns that track work in Denmark and Germany may change itineraries, so check travel times before you leave. That is not a reason to avoid the train. It is a reason to avoid heroic connections.

## Train, Flight, or Stopover

Take the train if the journey is part of the holiday; compare flights if speed is the priority.

Rome to Copenhagen is a long rail route. It can be a good choice if you want to avoid flying, use a rail pass, ride a European night train, or add stops in Italy, Switzerland, Germany, or Denmark.

If you need the fastest arrival, flights deserve a separate comparison. Related searches for this route include flight time and Copenhagen-to-Italy flights, which tells you many travellers are weighing rail against air.

For rail-minded travellers, the real decision is not "train or no train." It is whether to use the Nightjet route or turn the trip into a two- or three-day stopover itinerary.

## Best Choice by Traveller Type

Choose the route around your tolerance for long travel days, sleeper prices, and connection risk.

Traveller typeBest choiceWhyWants the simplest rail planRome to Munich by Nightjet, then Germany and Denmark by dayThe longest leg happens overnightWants lower missed-connection riskStop overnight in Munich or HamburgYou protect the long reserved legs and reduce stressWants scenery and stopoversDaytime route through northern Italy, Switzerland or Germany, and HamburgBetter for slow travel and city breaksUses Interrail or EurailGlobal Pass plus paid reservationsThe pass can cover the countries, but key trains still need reservationsHas fixed summer datesBook the Nightjet earlySleeper space and lower fares can disappearNeeds the fastest arrivalCompare flights separatelyThe train is possible, but it is a long journeyIf your dates are flexible, search several options. A one-day shift can change the sleeper price, the transfer quality, and whether the journey feels like an adventure or a logistical test.