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Bucharest to Budapest

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stuartmoss

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Hi folks, I’m considering getting the train from Bucharest to Budapest this Summer, hopefully over 3-5 days with stop offs. I’ve no idea about how, but in advance or on the day and routes etc. so before I begin planning…any advice? Thanks!
 
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R

RailUK Forums

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Jealous!

If you haven't already done so, take a look at the Man from Seat 61 https://www.seat61.com/international-trains/trains-from-Bucharest.htm#Bucharest_to_Budapest

As ever, it depends what you're going for. We went to the Saxon southern Transylvanian area (that's how we roll) and saw Sighisoara, Sibiu and Brasov - have a look at https://romaniatourism.com/saxon-heritage.html. We then picked up the overnight sleeper to Budapest. A quick look at the trains on Bahn.de tells me the overnight train still runs. I'm told it's a pretty route for day travel, but it looks like a change is required.

We had Interrail passes

Enjoy!

Patrick
 

Railsigns

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When I need to plan a European rail trip, I use a paper copy of "Rail Map Europe" and DB's on-line journey planner (links below).

As part of a longer rail journey in 2019, I travelled from Bucharest to Belgrade by train in three days. One more day should get you from Belgrade to Budapest (I did it in the opposite direction in 2008 on one train, taking about 7.5 hours)

My 2019 Bucharest to Belgrade itinerary was:

Day 1:
1240 București Nord Gara A (Train 461)
1820 Gorna Oryahovitsa

Day 2:
0815 Gorna Oryahovitsa (Train R4641)
1040 Tulovo

1053 Tulovo (Train R3622)
1440 Sofia

Day 3:
0930 Sofia (Train 1490)
1818 Belgrade-Topčider

Rail Map Europe:

Deutsche Bahn European Journey Planner:
 

LNW-GW Joint

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Mold, Clwyd
I did the reverse trip, ie Budapest-Bucharest (extended to Sofia when I discovered return flights from Bucharest were at silly times).
I wanted to traverse Transylvania to visit the Saxon towns, which means trains via Brasov (the biggest of the towns, and a major rail junction).
There are several possible routes Budapest-Brasov: via Arad/Sibiu, Cluj/Sighisoara and Cluj/Miercurea Ciuc (the Vienna-Bucharest sleeper runs Arad/Sighisoara).
There are several through trains from Budapest to Brasov, but I wanted day trains - no point in missing the views on the way.
I wanted to visit Sighisoara as the most spectacular medieval town (it certainly is), but found it involved a tight 10-minute change at Cluj, so chose the through train to Sibiu instead.
But in the lead up to the trip, I discovered CFR were closing the route through Sibiu for engineering work for a month, so reverted to Sighisoara instead.

I duly missed the 10-minute connection at Cluj, which meant getting a 42-station evening stopper on to Sighisoara (2 battered corridor coaches and an electric loco).
Anyway, the experience was really great, both on the train and in the towns, and I would recommend the trip - the Transylvanian landscape is just magical.
I stayed overnight in the old town in Sighisoara and then picked up the Vienna-Bucharest train next morning, breaking for a few hours at Brasov which has a very impressive central square.
Just don't expect any trains, especially long-distance ones, to be on time.
Many routes are having major upgrades to give them 160km/h speeds, with long stretches of single-track working right alongside major engineering works.

I think this year the Budapest-Sibiu-Brasov day train only runs in Romania (ie starts from Arad).
The Budapest-Cluj-Miercurea Ciuc-Brasov day train (Harghita) still runs - it serves the largely Hungarian-speaking area of eastern Transylvania.
This is the train I caught, changing at Cluj for Sighisoara.

Unless it's improved, you can only book trains in Hungary 60 days in advance, and in Romania only 30 days (and only reservable ones - not locals).
All quite straightforward on the MAV or CFR sites, producing e-tickets.
Domestic fares in HU and RO are cheap, but cross-border ones are quite high, more like other EC-type fares.
Many trains and most infrastructure (stations etc) are in very poor condition in RO - broken seats and platforms are common.
I did come across the CFR working timetable on their web site, very useful for showing line speeds.

Money (cash) was a bit of a problem in RO.
There are no facilities at the rail border, so you have to find an ATM somewhere, and there are very poor exchange rates (eg 30% charge) when you come to convert lei to anything else.
But it was a memorable trip.
 

dutchflyer

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17 Oct 2013
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1,388
The route via Beograd means using a BUS (gruelling for some) into and out of Srbije=all trains cancelled over the border.
Also note that there are 2 main lines between these 2 capitals, but 1 will be out of use due to long overdue works for weeks this summer, meaning much more demand for the other one.
In ROmania are a score of competing companies, all strictly private and only accepting tickets of their own, beside the old state-owned CFR. Mostly on the main route out of Bucuresti-toward Brasov. LNW-GT describes the usual impression on how the trains run in ROm quite exact.
If you plan to only make this trip by train, do not bother with passes, just buy when you go-but for the overnight portion best to reserve at least some days advance.
 
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