Lisbon to Madrid by train Lisbon to Madrid by train

Valencia to Madrid by train: tickets, times, and route guide

Valencia to Madrid by train takes about 2 hours on direct high-speed services, with Renfe, iryo, and OUIGO options on many dates.

Train service

Train tickets

Three operators run direct services on the same 302-kilometre line, journey times run from around 1 hour 50 minutes to just over 2 hours, and advance fares can start from around 7 to 9 euros depending on the operator and how early you book. For most travellers, the train is the default choice between the two cities.

This guide explains which operators serve the route, where each one arrives in Madrid, how fares and flexibility differ, and what to check before booking.

The Route at a Glance

All high-speed trains on this corridor depart from València Joaquín Sorolla station. If you are unfamiliar with Valencia's rail geography, note that Joaquín Sorolla is the dedicated terminus for high-speed and long-distance services. The older Estació del Nord does not handle long-distance high-speed trains.

Madrid has two major arrival stations, but current timetable evidence for the Valencia corridor shows Renfe AVE, OUIGO and iryo services using Madrid Chamartín-Clara Campoamor. This distinction matters for planning your onward journey in Madrid, and it is worth confirming on your operator's booking page before you travel.

Three operators serve the route: Renfe (which runs both its flagship AVE product and the low-cost Avlo sub-brand), OUIGO, and iryo. Multiple direct services run through much of the day, but exact first and last departures vary by date. Travellers should check current timetables on the operator's own website for exact departure times on their chosen date.

Journey Time

Direct high-speed trains take around 1 hour 50 minutes to just over 2 hours, depending on the service. The useful rail options for this city pair are direct high-speed services. The variation in journey time reflects the operator and specific departure rather than any intermediate stops.

iryo publishes 1 hour 50 minutes as the journey time between Valencia Joaquín Sorolla and Madrid Chamartín-Clara Campoamor, based on the operator's own materials. Across all operators, typical journey times average close to 2 hours, with some services running to just over 2 hours.

You may come across older travel guides quoting times of 1 hour 35 or 1 hour 38 minutes. These figures are not supported by current official operator information and should not be relied upon when planning connections.

The practical takeaway: plan for around 2 hours when arranging onward connections, and treat 1 hour 50 minutes as the best case confirmed by one operator rather than a guaranteed travel time across all services.

The Three Operators on This Route

Spain opened its high-speed rail market to competition earlier than most European countries, which is why three separate operators now serve the same corridor. They are not interchangeable: they arrive at different Madrid terminals, sit at different points on the price-versus-flexibility spectrum, and are each sold through different booking channels.

Renfe: Spain's National Operator, Two Products

Renfe operates two distinct products on this route.

AVE is Renfe's flagship high-speed service and the longer-established option on this corridor. Current aggregator timetable data shows AVE services from Valencia arriving at Madrid Chamartín-Clara Campoamor; confirm the terminal on renfe.com before travelling.

One feature specific to Renfe tickets is that AVE and Long Distance tickets include access to the Cercanías suburban rail network in Madrid, Valencia, and several other cities. The ticket barcode is scanned at Cercanías gates, which means your intercity fare covers local connections at both ends of the journey. This benefit is confirmed for Renfe tickets; it is not confirmed for OUIGO or iryo tickets in available evidence.

Renfe currently uses three fare family names: Básico, Elige, and Premium. Older Renfe class terminology has been replaced and should not be used when searching or comparing current tickets. In practical terms, Básico is the cheapest non-flexible tier, Elige sits in the middle with some change options, and Premium is the fully flexible fare. The specific conditions attached to each tier are set out on renfe.com and are worth reading before purchase, because the difference between a Básico and an Elige ticket can matter considerably if your plans change.

Avlo is Renfe's low-cost brand. It shares the same high-speed infrastructure as AVE but operates under a separate fare structure aimed at budget travellers. Avlo advertises fares from around 7 euros as a brand-level floor, though this should be treated as an indicative promotional figure rather than a price guaranteed on every Valencia to Madrid departure. The Madrid arrival station for Avlo on this specific corridor should be confirmed via a live Renfe booking before travel. Avlo fares are sold on renfe.com; some third-party booking platforms do not carry Avlo inventory, so if you are looking for the lowest available Renfe fare, checking renfe.com directly gives a more complete picture.

OUIGO: The Low-Cost Option

OUIGO is a low-cost high-speed operator serving the Valencia to Madrid corridor. It is positioned as the budget option, advertising tickets from around 9 euros on its route page, though as with all promotional fare floors this represents the entry point under ideal booking conditions rather than a price available on every date.

OUIGO trains are reported to arrive at Madrid Chamartín-Clara Campoamor. Confirm the terminal on ouigo.com when you book.

The main trade-off with OUIGO is stricter ancillary conditions, particularly around luggage. OUIGO applies more restrictive baggage allowances than legacy operators, which can make a nominally cheap ticket more expensive in practice if you are travelling with checked or oversized luggage. Specific allowances and fees change periodically, so check the current conditions on ouigo.com before booking rather than relying on figures from any secondary source.

OUIGO Spain sells tickets directly through ouigo.com, and it also appears on some aggregators including Omio and Trainline. Not every third-party platform carries the same inventory, so a single aggregator search may not show the full range of OUIGO prices. For a complete price comparison across all three operators, check ouigo.com separately alongside any other search you run.

iryo: Flexible Tickets and a Focus on Onboard Experience

iryo is an open-access operator that positions itself around ticket flexibility and on-board experience. Trains arrive at Madrid Chamartín-Clara Campoamor, confirmed by both the operator's own materials and independent sources.

iryo publishes 1 hour 50 minutes as the journey time between Valencia Joaquín Sorolla and Madrid Chamartín-Clara Campoamor, making it the fastest quoted time from any operator on this corridor.

Two timing details from iryo's own station guidance are worth noting. Boarding opens 30 minutes before departure. The doors close 2 minutes before the scheduled departure time. This is tighter than some travellers expect. Arriving at the platform gate after the two-minute mark means not boarding, so factor this into your station arrival plan, particularly if you are connecting from another service or relying on public transport to reach Joaquín Sorolla.

iryo's key differentiator over the budget options is ticket flexibility: its fare structure allows more change and refund options than Avlo or OUIGO, which matters when plans are uncertain. Tickets are available on iryo.eu.

Operator Comparison at a Glance

Renfe AVERenfe AvloOUIGOiryo
TypePremium high-speedLow-cost high-speedLow-cost high-speedPremium high-speed
Valencia stationJoaquín SorollaJoaquín SorollaJoaquín SorollaJoaquín Sorolla
Madrid stationChamartín (shown by current aggregator data; verify on renfe.com)Chamartín (shown by current aggregator data; verify on renfe.com)ChamartínChamartín
Indicative fare floorCheck renfe.comFrom around €7 (promotional)From around €9 (promotional)Check iryo.eu
Cercanías accessYes, included with ticketNot confirmedNot confirmedNot confirmed
Booking channelrenfe.comrenfe.comouigo.comiryo.eu
Eurail/Interrail reservation€10 to €24Not confirmedNot confirmed€10 to €13

Fare floors are promotional figures and are not guaranteed on every date. Always check live prices before booking.

The Two Madrid Arrival Stations

Understanding which Madrid station applies to your operator matters for planning onward travel, even if it is not a logistical crisis if you arrive at the wrong one.

Puerta de Atocha-Almudena Grandes is in the south of central Madrid and serves as a major long-distance rail hub. It has direct metro access and the Cercanías suburban network operates from the same complex, but current evidence for the Valencia route points to Chamartín rather than Atocha.

Madrid Chamartín-Clara Campoamor is in the north of the city and serves as the other major Madrid rail hub. Current evidence shows Renfe AVE, Avlo, iryo and OUIGO arriving here on the Valencia corridor. Chamartín also has metro access and connects into the Cercanías network.

Both terminals are accessible from central Madrid in broadly comparable time by metro. What matters is knowing in advance which one applies to your operator, so your onward transport or accommodation can be planned accordingly. Confirm your arrival terminal when purchasing your ticket and check your booking confirmation before travel.

Fares and Booking Strategy

Advance fares on this corridor can start from around 7 to 9 euros depending on the operator, the time of travel, and how far ahead you book. These figures are the promotional entry points advertised by Avlo (around 7 euros) and OUIGO (around 9 euros). Standard flexible fares and prices closer to the travel date will be higher. iryo and Renfe AVE do not publish a confirmed fare floor for this specific corridor in publicly available evidence, so their entry prices are best checked live on iryo.eu and renfe.com respectively.

A few principles apply across all three operators.

Book early for the lowest fares. Budget seats on Avlo and OUIGO fill at the cheapest price tiers first. The earlier you book, the more likely you are to access the advertised floor fare.

Match the fare type to your flexibility needs. A Básico ticket from Renfe or an equivalent budget fare from OUIGO may be non-refundable and non-exchangeable. If there is meaningful uncertainty about your travel dates, the saving on a budget fare can be outweighed by the cost of an unused ticket. Reading the conditions of the specific fare before purchase is essential.

Compare across all channels. Because OUIGO and Avlo fares are not always visible on every third-party platform, a single aggregator search may not give a complete picture of available prices. Running searches on renfe.com, ouigo.com, and iryo.eu alongside any aggregator gives a fuller comparison.

Calculate the full cost before deciding. Luggage fees, seat selection charges, and other ancillaries can close the gap between a budget carrier and a standard Renfe AVE fare. Check each operator's current conditions before assuming the cheapest headline fare is cheapest overall.

Rail Passes on This Route

If you hold an Interrail or Eurail pass, you can use it on high-speed services between Valencia and Madrid, but a compulsory reservation fee applies on top of the pass.

For Renfe AVE services, the reservation supplement is 10 to 24 euros per journey, based on 2026 Eurail reservation materials. Travellers should confirm the current figure is still valid at the time of booking.

For iryo services, the reservation supplement is 10 to 13 euros per journey, from the same source.

Reservation fees for OUIGO Spain are not confirmed in currently available evidence. Check eurail.com or interrail.eu for the current position before assuming OUIGO is pass-compatible.

One implication worth considering: on a short, heavily served corridor like Valencia to Madrid, advance point-to-point fares starting around 7 to 9 euros can be cheaper than the reservation fee alone on a pass journey. A rail pass makes strongest sense here if it forms part of a wider multi-country itinerary rather than being purchased specifically for this route.

Day Trip Practicality

The frequency and journey time on this corridor make day trips in both directions straightforward. With multiple services running through the day and a journey time of under 2 hours each way, a full day in either city is achievable with an early departure.

The main practical consideration for a day trip is the Madrid arrival station. If you are spending the day in central Madrid, check in advance whether your operator arrives at Atocha or Chamartín, and factor the onward metro journey into your morning and evening schedule.

Specific departure and arrival times vary by operator and date, so check the current timetable on the operator's own website before planning connections or setting a schedule for the day.

Pre-Booking Checklist

Before purchasing any ticket on this route, confirm the following directly on the operator's booking platform.

Your arrival station in Madrid. Current aggregator data shows Chamartín for Renfe AVE, Avlo, OUIGO and iryo on this corridor, but you should still verify the terminal on the operator’s booking page.

The fare conditions for the ticket you are buying. Refund and exchange rules vary significantly between fare tiers.

Luggage allowances, particularly if travelling with OUIGO.

Current departure and arrival times for your specific date, rather than relying on indicative schedules from secondary sources.

Rail pass reservation requirements, if applicable.

All three operators accept direct booking online. renfe.com covers both AVE and Avlo. ouigo.com handles OUIGO bookings. iryo.eu covers iryo services.

Frequently asked questions

Which station in Valencia do high-speed trains to Madrid depart from?

All high-speed and long-distance trains to Madrid depart from València Joaquín Sorolla station. The older Estació del Nord does not handle these services.

Which station in Madrid do Valencia trains arrive at?

Current aggregator timetable data shows Renfe AVE, Avlo, iryo and OUIGO arriving at Madrid Chamartín-Clara Campoamor on this corridor. Madrid station use can change by service and date, so confirm your terminal on the operator's booking page before you travel.

How long is the train from Valencia to Madrid?

Direct high-speed trains take around 1 hour 50 minutes to just over 2 hours depending on the service. iryo publishes 1 hour 50 minutes for its services; the average across all operators is closer to 2 hours. All services are direct with no change required.

What is the difference between AVE and Avlo?

Both are Renfe products on the same high-speed line. AVE is Renfe's flagship service with three fare tiers: Básico, Elige, and Premium. Avlo is Renfe's low-cost brand with a simpler, cheaper fare structure and advertised fares from around €7, though availability varies by date. Both depart from València Joaquín Sorolla. Check renfe.com for live prices and conditions.

Does OUIGO run between Valencia and Madrid?

Yes. OUIGO operates low-cost high-speed trains between Valencia Joaquín Sorolla and Madrid Chamartín-Clara Campoamor, with tickets advertised from around €9. OUIGO sells exclusively through ouigo.com and does not appear on most third-party booking platforms.