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Travel within my country of residence

  • February 24, 2026
  • 11 replies
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Hi, I just want to check how this works.  Am I right to think I can use one day of the pass at any time during the travel day validity period of the pass to travel within my country of residence and another day at any time during the travel day validity period of the pass and that would cover any number of train journeys?  For example with a 10 days in 2 months pass I may fly from London Gatwick to perhaps Sicily, spend 4 travel days making my way to Paris, then board a Eurostar to London St Pancras and take a Thameslink train from St Pancras to return to London Gatwick and the travel from Paris to London Gatwick (day 5 of the pass) would be one of my days for travel in my home country.  Then later in the 2 month period I could take a train from London Gatwick to St Pancras, change to Kings Cross, take a train to Edinburgh, change for a train to Aberdeen all in one day (day 6 of the pass) where I catch a flight to Oslo.  From Oslo I take train travel for 4 days (utilising my 10 days of travel) and catch a flight back to London Gatwick.  Would that fit the rules?  I guess what I’m asking for confirmation of is can the 2 country of residence travel days be any 2 days within the pass in any order, unconnected, and within those 2 days can there be any number of individual train journeys and not restricted to just one actual train journey.  I expect you can see my thinking and I’m just wanting to make sure I can use a 10 days in 2 months ticket in that way.  Thank you.

Best answer by rvdborgt

The 2 days in your country of residence can indeed be any 2 travel days during the validity period. As usual, during those days, you can use as many trains as you like, also in your country of residence.

11 replies

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  • Railmaster
  • Answer
  • February 24, 2026

The 2 days in your country of residence can indeed be any 2 travel days during the validity period. As usual, during those days, you can use as many trains as you like, also in your country of residence.


ralderton
Railmaster
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  • Railmaster
  • February 24, 2026

The plans you mention above are fine. 

You’re not restricted to one train; you can take as many as you need. You’re not restricted to travelling to/ from St Pancras - any departure port is fine, and you can take your UK travel days at any time during the validity of your pass.

But for completeness, you can only use them in connection with an international journey. You can’t travel from London to Aberdeen then not fly to Oslo.


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  • Author
  • Keeps calm and carries on
  • February 24, 2026

Thank you ​@rvdborgt for such a clear and concise response … I can now get down to planning my trips and what ticket I will need.  :)


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  • Author
  • Keeps calm and carries on
  • February 24, 2026

Hi ​@ralderton and thank you for your extra piece of information re must travel abroad.  Does the ongoing travel have to be the same day?  If not how long a delay can there be?  And I have to ask … how will they know, do I have to produce an onward travel ticket on demand?


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  • Engin-ius
  • February 24, 2026

@firlandsfarm - the answer is . . . they won’t know.  There is no way for the ticket inspector on the train or at the station to know whether you plan on leaving the country, unless of course you care getting a train to somewhere that that you cannot in any way leave the country from, and there can’t be too many of those places.


ralderton
Railmaster
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  • Railmaster
  • February 24, 2026

Hi ​@ralderton and thank you for your extra piece of information re must travel abroad.  Does the ongoing travel have to be the same day?  If not how long a delay can there be?  And I have to ask … how will they know, do I have to produce an onward travel ticket on demand?

I don’t think it’s specified anywhere in the conditions. Next day should be fine though  

The inspector is, I think, entitled to ask to see your proof of international travel, though they’ve never asked for mine. 


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  • Author
  • Keeps calm and carries on
  • February 25, 2026

Hi ​@ralderton I suspect it’s one of those ‘silly’ rules that the rule setters think sounds good but has not been thought through fully and is not policeable.  How would it be policed if the ticket/user originates in a Schengen country travelling to another Schengen country?!

BTW would I be correct to think ‘origin’ is set by the ticket holder’s passport and not where they are on purchase nor where they actually live day to day.  So for example someone who lives in a different country than the one that issued their passport can buy a Pass and use it to travel around the country they live in being different from their passport?  


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  • Railmaster
  • February 25, 2026

BTW would I be correct to think ‘origin’ is set by the ticket holder’s passport and not where they are on purchase nor where they actually live day to day.  So for example someone who lives in a different country than the one that issued their passport can buy a Pass and use it to travel around the country they live in being different from their passport?  

Your country of residence is what's important. That's normally where you are registered. There are some nuances, see section 5.2 in the Pass Conditions of Use.


ralderton
Railmaster
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  • Railmaster
  • February 25, 2026

The reason the rule exists, is to protect revenue for the train operator. If a resident could use an Interrail pass freely, even commute, in their own country, there are plenty of countries where people would do that instead of buying more expensive tickets. Whereas in a foreign country, the opportunity and desire to do that is reduced. 

The rail pass simply couldn’t exist in its current form & price if the rule wasn’t in place. Operators wouldn’t sign up

It does rely on an element of self policing. There are some countries where ticket inspectors rarely check, and others where they definitely will!

Your country of residence is what you tell Interrail, and it’s usually pretty clear. 


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  • Author
  • Keeps calm and carries on
  • February 25, 2026

Thanks ​@ralderton I realised why they have the rule … I was just questioning how it’s determined.  In the past I have been asked to produce my passport sometimes on mainland Europe (strange when I clearly sound ‘British’!).  I see 5.2 effectively says it’s your passport country unless you can prove otherwise.  Makes sense.


ralderton
Railmaster
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  • Railmaster
  • February 25, 2026

That’s also an ID check. Particularly common in Switzerland, but technically any inspector can ask you for the ID you used when you activated the pass. I’ve only been asked once in the UK.