In case you miss the last connection of the day and are stranded, you will be entitled to:
- Accommodation for the night and (if necessary) transport to/from it.
- Meals and refreshments in reasonable relation to the waiting
time. - Travel on the next available train to your destination.
- Compensation for delay.
This all follows from EU Regulation 1371/2007. The fact that your pass validity will have ended is irrelevant. It's the railways’ responsibility to get this all arranged for you, so do speak to staff if you find yourself in such a situation, or even earlier, if you think you are going to be stranded.
>By the way, the UK is part of Europe :)]
Thank you so much, rvdborgt, for confirming that! Reading other topics it seemed that I might have to pay for the travel the next day, but get the seat reservation/Eurostar fee ‘for free’. There was a topic about someone whose night train was delayed and they had to use another day on their pass the next day, so that was what worried me.
Yes, UK is part of Europe - it’s extremely ironic that I wrote that, I’m not actually from the UK originally, but ‘from Europe’ and it always irked me when Brits use that expression (a lot!). But it seems that I’ve lived here long enough now that my speech has been contaminated ;-)
@rvdborgt
Last time on 19th July, Eurostar to London from Paris was delayed for 2 Hours 20 minutes. Can Interrailers apply for compensation?
Last time on 19th July, Eurostar to London from Paris was delayed for 2 Hours 20 minutes. Can Interrailers apply for compensation?
https://www.interrail.eu/en/support/delay-compensation