Country guide
Visiting Germany from the USA
What you actually need to know before riding German trains as an American visitor: tickets, airport transfers, power, money, and the mistakes that cost Americans the most time and money.
Your first hour on the ground
Every major German city has train connections direct from the airport. The flight from the US East Coast lands early morning; take the train straight to your first city rather than adding a domestic flight. It is usually faster door-to-door and you arrive rested.
- Frankfurt (FRA) has the best rail connection of any German airport — ICE long-distance trains depart from the dedicated Fernbahnhof to Munich, Cologne, Hamburg, and Berlin.
- Munich (MUC) uses S-Bahn S1/S8 to the city centre (~45 min).
- Berlin (BER) has the Airport Express (FEX) every 30 minutes to Hauptbahnhof.
Buying tickets: the three options
- Single tickets (Sparpreis) — book 2–3 months ahead via DB Navigator or Omio. Usually €19–€49 for long-distance journeys that cost €120+ on the day. Non-refundable.
- Eurail Global Pass — flat-fee pass worth it for multi-country itineraries (4+ countries). German-only? Almost always cheaper to buy single Sparpreis tickets.
- BahnCard 25 or 50 — annual discount subscription. Pays for itself if you make many long-distance trips but auto-renews. Cancel in writing 6 weeks before renewal.
Common mistakes Americans make
- Buying expensive Flex tickets at the last minute instead of Sparpreis in advance (3–5× more).
- Accepting "Dynamic Currency Conversion" at the ticket machine (always a worse rate — use EUR).
- Forgetting to validate regional paper tickets — €60 fine.
- Confusing platforms. The sector letter (A–F) on the platform tells you where your coach stops. Check the Wagenstandsanzeiger or the DB Navigator app.
- Booking a connecting flight when the train would have been 30 minutes faster and €100 cheaper.
Typical 10-day East Coast itinerary
- Fly overnight JFK/EWR/BOS → Frankfurt (FRA), arrive ~09:00
- ICE Frankfurt → Munich (~3h 15) — drop bags, nap, walk the Altstadt
- Day trip Munich → Neuschwanstein via Füssen
- ICE Munich → Berlin (~4h) or scenic alternative via Nuremberg
- Berlin for 2–3 days
- ICE Berlin → Hamburg (~2h) or ICE Berlin → Cologne (~4h 15)
- Fly back from Hamburg, Cologne/Düsseldorf, or return to Frankfurt
Practical essentials
- Money: No currency other than euro. Use a card with no foreign transaction fees. Keep €50–€100 cash for rural cafés and market stalls.
- Power: Type F Schuko outlets, 230V. Dual-voltage US chargers just need a plug adapter. All modern trains have AC sockets at seats.
- SIM / data: Buy a Vodafone CallYa or an eSIM (Airalo, Holafly) rather than roaming. €15–€25 for 2–3 weeks.
- Luggage: No size check-in on German trains. Bring what you like but lift it onto overhead racks yourself — see luggage guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I buy a Eurail Pass or a BahnCard as a US visitor?
For trips under 2 weeks in Germany only, single DB Sparpreis tickets booked 2–3 months ahead are usually cheapest. Eurail Global Pass makes sense for multi-country itineraries (Germany + Austria + Switzerland, e.g.). A BahnCard 25 pays for itself quickly if you are making 3+ long-distance trips in Germany but has a 1-year auto-renewing subscription — cancel in writing or pay the next year.
Do US credit cards work at German ticket machines?
Most DB ticket machines accept major US cards (Visa, Mastercard, Amex) via chip+PIN or contactless. A handful of older regional machines are still cash-only in rural areas. The DB Navigator app works with any US-billed card and is the most reliable option.
How long is the train from Frankfurt Airport to the city centre?
12 minutes on S-Bahn S8 or S9 to Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof. Both run every 15 minutes from the Regionalbahnhof beneath Terminal 1. For ICE onward travel (Munich, Cologne, Berlin) use the separate Fernbahnhof next door.
What power adapter do I need for the train?
Germany uses Type F (Schuko) outlets at 230V/50Hz. US 110V devices with 100–240V rated power supplies (phones, laptops, camera chargers) work fine with a simple plug adapter. Hair dryers and curling irons generally do not — bring a dual-voltage travel version or buy locally.
Can I pay for tickets in dollars?
No. Germany is euro-only. Your US credit card will be charged in EUR and converted to USD by your issuer. Decline "Dynamic Currency Conversion" offers at machines or terminals — they are always a worse rate. Cards with no foreign transaction fees (Chase Sapphire, Capital One Venture, Charles Schwab debit) save 1–3%.
Do I need to validate my ticket?
Long-distance tickets (ICE, IC, EC) bought online are pre-validated by passenger name — no action needed. Regional paper tickets bought at machines must be stamped in the red validator boxes on the platform before boarding. Skipping validation is a €60 fine and the conductor has no discretion.
Live status
Before your travel day, check today's live German rail status for ongoing delays or cancellations on popular long-distance routes.