Bicycling in
Austria
by Paul
Marlin
Train Service

Part I–Germany Part II–Upper
Danube Part
III–Ybbs & Erlauf Part IV-Lower Danube
You don't have to be a train buff to appreciate the convenience of
train travel in Austria. Austrian Federal Railroad
(Österreichischen Bundesbahnen - ÖBB) service is extensive, frequent,
and inexpensive; and you can set your watch by it. It is an ideal way
to get from an airport such as Salzburg or Vienna to the starting point
of your ride or to return. There is every other hour service on all
lines, even to rather remote towns. Since most towns are served by
trains, you can use the train as a SAG wagon or
to bypass any area that might be of less interest.
Detailed train schedules for all of Europe can be found at the
excellent German Railway English language Web site. Details include
whether a train carries bikes. Be aware that schedules change slightly
from winter to summer about May 23.
It is very easy to carry a bike on the train. A Fahradmitnahmekarte
(bicycle take along ticket) costs about $3.40 and is valid an entire
day. Normally, each train has a special bicycle compartment
either in the front, back, or center of the train, or a separate
bike car with a huge blue bicycle symbol on it. When the conductor sees
you on the platform with a bike, he or she will head for the bike car
where you hand it up to him and he secures it. Be sure to tell him
where you are going. When you arrive at your destination, head for the
bike car and the conductor will hand it to you.
Because station stops last no more than a minute or two, I had
recurring nightmares of the train pulling out without my retrieving my
bike. It never happened. In fact, upon reaching a small suburban
Salzburg station, I became disoriented and headed the wrong direction.
By the time we reached the rear of the train and turned around when we
realized we had gone the wrong way, the conductor had begun unloading
the bikes in the front. We reached the front before all six bikes had
been unloaded. Train personnel don't seem to treat bicycles as a
nuisance or bike riders as freaks. Everybody rides them.
There are several classes of trains in Austria:
- Euro city, Euro
night (EC, EN) - International express trains that normally
don't carry bikes except as checked baggage (all the guide books say
that it takes checked baggage several days to reach the destination).
- D Trains -
2nd class overnight international trains that carry coaches with
reclining seats, sleeping cars, and couchettes. The latter
compartments with 4 (1st class) or 6 (2nd
class) bunks for sleeping arranged in
two tiers. D trains do not carry bikes.
- Inter City
(IC) - fast trains on the main routes. In addition to the
Fahradmitnahmekarte, a seat reservation is required to carry a
bicycle. Bicycles
go in the baggage car, which is always in the center of the train and
can be recognized by a windowless door in the middle of the car.
Reservations are required because only 7 bikes are allowed per stop,
not because of a lack of space but because of a time constraint.
IC's stop only for about 2 minutes, even at the largest cities.
- Eilzug
(E) - express trains. They make fewer stops than the regional trains,
but more than the IC's. No reservation is necessary to carry a
bike; and the bike compartment is in the front or rear of the train.
- Regionalbahn
(R) - locals that stop at every station; the only service in remote
areas and the only way to get to small stations on the main lines. No
reservation is necessary to carry a bike; and the bike compartment is
in the front or rear of the train. They are also more loosely
operated: on two occasions, the train backed up to drop off passengers
who missed a stop. The first was a student group on their way to
camp; and the second was a single little old lady.
- Snellbahn
(S-Bahn) - suburban trains in larger cities. The
only city in Austria with an S-Bahn system is Vienna. You can
bring bikes onto any car, except during rush hour. S-bahn's
in Munich, Germany had bike compartments at both the front and rear;
and bikes were free, except during rush hour.
The seat reservations, which can be obtained for a nominal charge,
are only required in Austria for sleeping accomodations (and carrying a
bike on IC's). I never found them necessary, at least in June and
September when I normally travel in Europe.