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HOW TO AVOID SEAT RESERVATION

  • February 11, 2026
  • 2 replies
  • 18 views

Hey everyone I am a student studying in Lille and have taken a 3 month Global Eurorail pass planning to cover Europ, but I facing the following issues:

1) I am planning my Central Europe trip and then when I try to go to Berlin from Amsterdam it says seat reservation recommended. So what does it mean I can travel by not booking as well?

 

2) Also Lille to Berlin shows a non seat reservation of 24 euros but if I travel to to Amsterdam from Lille and then Berlin it shows only on 8 euro for seat reservation for almost the same time. Why is the rail planner not optimising to show me the optimised travel option ?

How do I navigate this issue?

 

It would be great if someone could throw some light on this issue. I am facing

Best answer by rvdborgt

For Lille to Amsterdam, take the direct TER/IC to Antwerp, then the ECD to Amsterdam Zuid (metro and tram available there). For Amsterdam Centraal, change at Schiphol Airport. No reservations needed.

For Lille to Berlin, you could travel to Brussel via either Gent or Tournai, then ICE to Cologne and then ICE to Berlin. Or via Antwerp - Rotterdam - Amersfoort. All possible without reservations, except in summer, when you need a reservation on the ICEs from Amsterdam and Brussels.

In Germany, if you're alone, you can often still find a free seat. If it's very busy, check the train composition in the DB Navigator app and go to the carriage with the BahnBonus seats. These can't be reserved. Or head to the end of the train with 2nd class carriages (assuming you have 2nd).

Seat reservations in Germany are €3 per train on tickets.oebb.at or cd.cz. Or €5.50 per journey (including all trains) on bahn.de. Don't book seats via Interrail. Instead, use thbis page as a guide:

https://www.seat61.com/interrail-and-eurail-reservations.htm

2 replies

Forum|alt.badge.img+3
  • Railly clever
  • February 11, 2026

You can always travel with your pass (= your ticket) without a reservation as long as it is not required.

If you want a reserved seat on trains with optional reservations depends on the number of travelers, the date of travel, the personal preferences (rather pay a few euros vs. to stand/switch seats) etc.

You can get your reservations cheaper on the webpages of the operators.

Avoid Eurostar towards Amsterdam. Their mandatory reservation fee is €25+. Take the slightly slower IC/EC with free-seating instead.

And plan your trip elsewhere than on the railplanner app. The DB Navigator app is a good alternative.


Forum|alt.badge.img+10
  • Railmaster
  • Answer
  • February 11, 2026

For Lille to Amsterdam, take the direct TER/IC to Antwerp, then the ECD to Amsterdam Zuid (metro and tram available there). For Amsterdam Centraal, change at Schiphol Airport. No reservations needed.

For Lille to Berlin, you could travel to Brussel via either Gent or Tournai, then ICE to Cologne and then ICE to Berlin. Or via Antwerp - Rotterdam - Amersfoort. All possible without reservations, except in summer, when you need a reservation on the ICEs from Amsterdam and Brussels.

In Germany, if you're alone, you can often still find a free seat. If it's very busy, check the train composition in the DB Navigator app and go to the carriage with the BahnBonus seats. These can't be reserved. Or head to the end of the train with 2nd class carriages (assuming you have 2nd).

Seat reservations in Germany are €3 per train on tickets.oebb.at or cd.cz. Or €5.50 per journey (including all trains) on bahn.de. Don't book seats via Interrail. Instead, use thbis page as a guide:

https://www.seat61.com/interrail-and-eurail-reservations.htm