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To travel from London to Eurovision 2026 in Vienna by train, the main route is Eurostar from St Pancras (13:01) to Brussels, then the Nightjet overnight sleeper (departs 19:06, arrives Wien Hbf 10:13 next morning), running Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. A second option is Eurostar to Amsterdam then the daily new-generation Nightjet to Vienna — this is available for Eurovision week (12–16 May 2026). Budget around £150–£250 return when booking in advance. The Paris–Vienna direct Nightjet was cancelled on 14 December 2025. ÖBB is the official mobility partner of Eurovision 2026, and ESC ticket holders arriving by air get 25% off the City Airport Train (CAT, from €11.18).

The 70th Eurovision Song Contest takes place in Vienna from 12 to 16 May 2026, and rail is at the heart of the journey. ÖBB, the official mobility partner of the contest, has launched the United by Music, Moved by ÖBB campaign — a Taurus locomotive in Eurovision livery has been criss-crossing Austria since February 2026. British fans are the third-largest group travelling to Vienna for the event, so planning your train journey early is essential. This guide covers every route from the UK to Vienna, with real 2026 prices, timetables and tips to avoid last-minute surprises.

Eurovision 2026 in Vienna: the 70th edition at a glance

Interior view of the Wiener Stadthalle lit up during a major concert, venue for Eurovision 2026 in Vienna
Photo by Philipp Katzenberger on Unsplash

Wiener Stadthalle, 12–16 May 2026

12, 14 and 16 May 2026 Roland Rainer Platz 1, 1150 Wien 16,152 seats, 500,000 visitors expected Sold out — fanSALE via oeticket.com

Austria won hosting rights after JJ’s victory in Basel in 2025 with Wasted Love. According to Eurovision.com (EBU), Vienna is hosting the contest for the third time, after 1967 and 2015. Semi-Final 1 is on Tuesday 12 May, Semi-Final 2 on Thursday 14 May, and the Grand Final on Saturday 16 May, all starting at 21:00 CEST. Hosts are Victoria Swarovski and Michael Ostrowski.

35 countries are competing, with 5 boycotts (Iceland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Spain) linked to Israel’s participation — the largest boycott since 1970. All 95,000 tickets are sold out. Official face-value resale is available only through the fanSALE platform at oeticket.com.

Alongside the shows, the Eurovision Village is free to enter on Rathausplatz (Town Hall Square) from 10 to 17 May, 14:00 to midnight. A great alternative if you do not have a show ticket but still want to soak up the atmosphere.

Highlights of this edition

  • ÖBB = official mobility partner, campaign United by Music, Moved by ÖBB
  • Free Eurovision Village on Rathausplatz, 10–17 May 2026
  • Show ticket = free Wiener Linien travel pass on the day of your performance
  • 70th edition: special performances by Ruslana, Verka Serduchka, Alexander Rybak
Pixidia tip: fans without a show ticket can still experience Eurovision fully through the free Eurovision Village and public screenings. If you do have a ticket, download the ÖBB app before you leave home — it shows real-time disruptions and stores your digital tickets.

25% off the CAT: the smart move for fans flying into Vienna

City Airport Train CAT in blue at Wien Mitte station, direct 16-minute link from Vienna Airport
Photo by Nikolai Kolosov on Unsplash

City Airport Train — 16 minutes, airport to Wien Mitte

~€11.18 one way (with 25% off) 16 min non-stop, every 30 minutes VIE Airport → Wien Mitte/Landstraße Standard price: €14.90 / €24.90 return

The City Airport Train (CAT) is the only non-stop express link between Vienna International Airport (VIE) and the city centre. According to meinbezirk.at and ggg.at, a 25% discount is available to ESC 2026 ticket holders flying into Vienna as part of the event’s sustainability programme.

CAT ticketStandard pricePrice with 25% ESC discount
Single€14.90~€11.18
Return (valid 6 months)€24.90~€18.68
Children under 15FreeFree

The service runs every 30 minutes, from 06:07 (airport to city) until 23:37. A useful extra: Wien Mitte station has a City Air Terminal where passengers can check in luggage and collect boarding passes 24 to 75 minutes before departure, depending on the airline.

For a budget alternative, the S-Bahn S7 also links the airport to the centre in around 23 minutes for just €5.40, with several stops along the way.

CAT highlights

  • 16 minutes non-stop — the fastest link to Wien Mitte
  • Free Wi-Fi, USB charging points, dedicated luggage space
  • Check in your return flight luggage at Wien Mitte before heading to the show
  • 25% off with ESC ticket — confirm the procedure at cityairporttrain.com
To check: sources confirm the 25% discount but do not specify the exact redemption method (promo code, showing your ESC ticket, QR code). Visit cityairporttrain.com or oeticket.com when booking for the exact procedure.

London to Vienna by train: the Eurostar + Nightjet combination

Person seated in a sleeper train looking out of the window, overnight journey to Vienna for Eurovision 2026
Photo by Guillaume Didelet on Unsplash

London St Pancras → Wien Hbf: two sleeper options

Eurostar from St Pancras from £51 one way From ~£150–£250 return (advance) ~17–19 hours total door-to-door Overnight Nightjet — saves a night’s hotel

There is no direct train from London to Vienna, but the combination of Eurostar and Nightjet overnight sleeper makes for a genuinely comfortable journey — and a strategically sensible one during Eurovision week when Vienna hotel prices can reach £400–£600 per night.

Option A — Via Brussels (recommended, 3x per week)

Route: London St Pancras → Brussels-Midi (Eurostar, departs 13:01, arrives 16:06) then Nightjet NJ425 Brussels → Wien Hbf (departs 19:06, arrives 10:13 next morning). Total journey: around 17 hours.

This route runs Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays only. For Eurovision week, compatible departures from London are Monday 11 May (arriving Vienna Tuesday 12 May — Semi-Final 1 day) and Wednesday 13 May (arriving Thursday 14 May — Semi-Final 2 day). For the Grand Final on Saturday 16 May, departing Wednesday 13 May gives you two full days in Vienna beforehand. Book the Eurostar at eurostar.com and the Nightjet at nightjet.com or oebb.at.

Option B — Via Amsterdam (daily, new-generation Nightjet)

Route: London St Pancras → Amsterdam Centraal (Eurostar, departs 11:04, arrives 16:15) then new-generation Nightjet Amsterdam → Wien Hbf (departs 19:00, arrives 09:48 next morning). Total journey: around 18–19 hours.

This service runs every day and uses the brand-new Nightjet fleet with individual mini cabins (with shower/toilet access), 1–2 bed private sleepers, and affordable couchettes. According to Seat61, it is often the cheaper of the two sleeper options. Note: the Amsterdam route is confirmed as available for Eurovision week (12–16 May 2026); a separate trackwork closure affects this route from 14 June to 12 December 2026, so it does not affect your ESC trip.

Option C — Via Paris (daytime, if you prefer not to travel overnight)

Route: London St Pancras → Paris Gare du Nord (Eurostar, ~2h20) + Paris Gare de l’Est → Munich Hbf (TGV, ~5h20) + Munich Hbf → Wien Hbf (Railjet, ~3h56). Total: 12–14 hours, 2 changes. Best for those who prefer to travel in daylight. Budget around £120–£200 for the full journey. Book each segment separately for the best prices: Eurostar on eurostar.com, Paris–Munich on thetrainline.com, Munich–Wien on oebb.at.

OptionJourney timeEstimated return fareType
Via Brussels (Eurostar + Nightjet, 3x/week)~17h£150–£250Overnight
Via Amsterdam (Eurostar + Nightjet, daily)~18–19h£150–£250Overnight
Via Paris + Munich (daytime)~12–14h£120–£200Day

Highlights

  • Via Brussels: Nightjet saves a night’s hotel — critical during ESC week price spikes
  • Via Amsterdam: daily service, new-generation fleet with mini cabins and private sleepers
  • Via Paris/Munich: most daytime options, best for those who prefer not to travel overnight
  • Carbon footprint: ~40 kg CO₂ return by train vs 423 kg by air, per Labos 1point5
Pixidia tip: book each ticket separately to get the best price — Eurostar on eurostar.com, Nightjet on oebb.at or nightjet.com. Do not buy the whole journey as a single package, as it is significantly more expensive. Nightjet seats and couchettes are available from €29.90; the Brussels–Vienna Nightjet often opens for booking only 3–4 months ahead, so check regularly.
Compare trains London → Vienna From ~£150 return
See timetables and prices

Zurich to Vienna: 12 direct trains a day with SBB and ÖBB

ÖBB Railjet crossing the Austrian Alps, the Zurich–Vienna route for Eurovision 2026
Photo by Laszlo Biro on Unsplash

SBB/ÖBB Railjet — 7h50 direct via the Arlberg

7h50 direct (12+ trains/day) From CHF 33.66 / ~€35 (Sparschiene) Wi-Fi, restaurant car, power sockets on board New-generation Nightjet from June 2026

SBB (Swiss Federal Railways) and ÖBB jointly operate more than 12 direct daily services between Zurich HB and Wien Hbf. According to mobilityblog.ch, around 730,000 passengers used these services in 2025 (+10% on 2024), and Vienna ranks among the most popular Swiss rail destinations. Notably, the Swiss Eurovision delegation for 2026 (artist Veronica Fusaro and her team) travelled to Vienna by train from Zurich HB on 2 May 2026.

Sample Railjet timetables from Zurich (confirm at sbb.ch or oebb.at): regular departures at 07:16, 09:16, 11:16 and 13:16, each journey taking 7h53. Early Sparschiene bookings start from CHF 33.66 (~€35) in 2nd class. A return Sparschiene booked in advance runs between CHF 80 and 150 (~£70–130).

For those who prefer night travel, two Nightjet services per direction are also available. The Zurich–Vienna route will be one of the first to receive the brand-new generation Nightjet trains (individual mini cabins, private sleepers with ensuite bathrooms) from June 2026 — ideal for the return journey after the final.

Highlights

  • 12+ direct trains daily — no mandatory reservation on Railjet with an Interrail pass
  • Arlberg crossing: one of the most spectacular rail journeys in Europe
  • New-generation Nightjet with mini cabins from June 2026
  • SBB Mobile app recommended for Swiss travellers managing the digital ticket end-to-end
Pixidia tip: book on sbb.ch (English interface available) for Swiss tickets, then directly on oebb.at for the Austrian segment if you are booking separately. The SBB Mobile app handles the full digital ticket.
Compare trains Zurich → Vienna From ~€35 (Sparschiene)
See timetables and prices

Milan to Vienna: the Nightjet NJ235, daily and unbeatable

Interior of an ÖBB Nightjet sleeper train, comfortable couchette for the Milan–Vienna overnight journey
Photo by Martin Adams on Unsplash

Nightjet NJ235 — 11h42 overnight, departs 21:26

Departs 21:26 — Arrives 08:52 11h42 journey time, daily From €29.90 (seat), €50–90 (couchette) Via Brescia, Verona, Padua, Villach

For fans travelling from Italy or stopping in Milan, the Nightjet NJ235 is the ideal solution. According to nachtzug.net, the train departs Milan Centrale at 21:26 and arrives at Wien Hauptbahnhof at 08:52, a journey of 11h42. It runs daily, stopping at Brescia (22:30), Verona (23:17), Vicenza (23:54) and Padua (00:34).

ClassPrice from
Seat (reclining)€29.90
Couchette (6-berth)~€50
Couchette (4-berth)~€60–90
Sleeping car (private)~€90–159

For daytime travel, Railjet services via Innsbruck or the Brenner route link Milan to Wien in ~9h47 to 12h, from €17 in advance. According to rail.cc, since 2026 the NJ235 also stops at Graz, which adds a little to journey time but serves more Austrian cities.

Highlights

  • Runs daily — no day-of-week restriction unlike the Brussels–Vienna service
  • Arrives 08:52 — a full morning in Vienna from day one
  • Saves one night’s accommodation during peak ESC pricing (×3–5 the normal rate)
  • Interrail valid; reservation supplement required (from €14 seat, €34 couchette)
Pixidia tip: during Eurovision week, demand for the NJ235 is high. If couchettes are full, try seats (€29.90) — they tend to remain available longer. Book on oebb.at, trenitalia.com or thetrainline.com.

From Brussels: the Nightjet sleeper as a standalone option

Eurostar at station — the London–Brussels–Vienna journey combining Eurostar and ÖBB Nightjet for Eurovision 2026
Photo by Christian Lue on Unsplash

Brussels → Vienna Nightjet: timings and booking details

Nightjet Brussels–Wien: 15h25 (3x/week) Nightjet from €29.90 + Eurostar from £51 Departs Brussels Mon/Wed/Fri at 19:06 Arrives Wien Hbf next morning ~10:13

The Nightjet Brussels → Wien (NJ425) is the only night train connecting North-West Europe to Vienna. According to b-europe.com and nachtzug.net, it operates Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays only, departing Brussels-Midi at 19:06 and arriving at Wien Hauptbahnhof the following morning at around 10:13. The return direction runs on Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays.

From London, the ideal combination is Eurostar St Pancras (depart 13:01, arrive Brussels 16:06) then this Nightjet. Eurostar tickets start from £51 standard one-way; Nightjet from €29.90 in a seat up to ~€189.90 for a private sleeper. Total cost starts at around £80–£100 per person for the overnight leg when booked early.

Note: this Nightjet often opens for booking only 3–4 months ahead — check nightjet.com regularly.

Highlights

  • Only night train from North-West Europe direct to Vienna
  • Easy to combine with Eurostar from London St Pancras
  • Saves a night’s hotel during ESC week — a major financial advantage
Important: the Brussels–Wien Nightjet runs only 3 times a week. For ESC, compatible London departures are Monday 11 May (arriving Vienna Tuesday 12 May) and Wednesday 13 May (arriving Thursday 14 May). For the Grand Final on Saturday 16 May, Wednesday 13 May is the recommended departure.

Wien Hauptbahnhof: everything you need to know on arrival

Main concourse of Wien Hauptbahnhof, Vienna's central station serving all international trains
Photo by Lukas S on Unsplash

The central station since 2015 — everything in one place

Favoritenstraße, 1100 Wien (10th district) 268,000 passengers/day, 10 platforms 90+ shops (BahnhofCity mall integrated) Left luggage: €2–4.50/day

Since December 2015, all international trains arrive at Wien Hauptbahnhof (Wien Hbf) — not at Wien Westbahnhof, which now serves only regional trains and the Westbahn private operator. According to Seat61, the station has 10 platforms, an integrated shopping mall (BahnhofCity) with supermarkets, a pharmacy and restaurants, and left-luggage lockers at €2–4.50/day — very useful if you want to drop your bags before heading to the Wiener Stadthalle.

From Wien Hbf to the Wiener Stadthalle

The venue is in the 15th district (Roland Rainer Platz 1), around 5 km from the station. Transport options:

TransportTimeRoute
U4 → U6~25 minChange at Längenfeldgasse, alight at Burggasse-Stadthalle (3-min walk)
Tram 18~28 minFrom Wien Hbf direct to Urban-Loritz-Platz
U1 + U6~30 minU1 northbound → Stephansplatz, then U6 towards Floridsdorf → Burggasse-Stadthalle
Uber / taxi~15–20 min~€8–15

Good news: your Wiener Stadthalle show ticket acts as a free travel pass on Wiener Linien (U-Bahn, trams, buses) across Vienna, on the day of the performance. Valid for both the outward and return journey, according to Wien.info FAQ ESC.

For the full week, a 7-day Wiener Linien pass at €25.20 (via the WienMobil app) is the most economical option — reinforced transport for ESC includes extra U6 frequency (Burggasse-Stadthalle station is the direct stop for the venue) and special ESC-branded trams on line 49.

Highlights

  • All international services arrive at Wien Hbf — Wien Westbahnhof is regional only
  • ESC ticket = free Wiener Linien travel pass on the day of your show
  • Left-luggage lockers available between arrival and showtime
  • U6 Burggasse-Stadthalle: a 3-minute walk from the venue
Pixidia tip: read our full guide on Vienna’s public transport, metro lines and practical neighbourhoods for Eurovision 2026 — it covers all lines, updated 2026 fares and the fan zones (Rathausplatz, Prater, Naschmarkt).

Return train fares by departure city

Vienna illuminated at night — Austria's capital hosting Eurovision 2026 from 12 to 16 May
Photo by Fajar Al Hadi on Unsplash

Estimates by city — booked in advance (Sparschiene)

Departure cityRecommended optionEstimated return fareOne-way journey time
LondonEurostar + Nightjet via Brussels or Amsterdam~£150–£250~17–19h
ZurichRailjet direct (daytime)CHF 80–150 (~£70–130)7h50
MilanNightjet NJ235~€60–12011h42
BrusselsNightjet direct (3x/week)~€60–18015h25
AmsterdamNightjet direct (daily)~€80–200~14–15h

All estimates are based on Sparschiene fares booked 4–8 weeks in advance. Last-minute prices (booked a week before travel) are typically 2–4 times higher, especially around a major event like Eurovision. According to The Trainline, London–Vienna tickets can exceed £400 return at the last minute during ESC week.

The Bratislava hack

Bratislava (Slovakia) is just 55 km from Vienna. A REX8 train runs every hour between the two capitals in 56 minutes for €7–12. Staying in Bratislava instead of Vienna — where mid-range hotel rooms reach £350–£500/night during ESC — can save £200–£400 on accommodation over five nights.

Highlights

  • Book each ticket separately: always cheaper than buying the full journey as a package
  • ÖBB Sparschiene opens 6 months ahead — the ideal window has passed for May 2026
  • Bratislava hack: 55 km, 56 min, €7–12 — substantial savings on accommodation
  • 7-day Wiener Linien pass (€25.20) covers the full ESC week
Pixidia tip: to find accommodation within walking distance or fewer than three stops from the Wiener Stadthalle, read our guide on the best hotels near the Wiener Stadthalle for Eurovision 2026.

More Eurovision 2026 Vienna guides

Everything you need for ESC week

Once your train journey is sorted, two Pixidia resources will help you plan the rest of your Vienna stay:

Reminder: all tickets for the 9 ESC 2026 performances are officially sold out. The only official face-value resale is available through the fanSALE platform at oeticket.com. Avoid any resale on social media or unapproved platforms.

Practical information for your Vienna trip

Frequently asked questions

Is there a direct train from London to Vienna for Eurovision 2026?

There is no direct train from London to Vienna. The best option is Eurostar from St Pancras to Brussels (departs 13:01, arrives 16:06), then the ÖBB Nightjet overnight sleeper to Wien Hbf (departs 19:06, arrives 10:13 next morning), running Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. A second daily option is Eurostar to Amsterdam then the new-generation Nightjet to Vienna. Budget around £150–£250 return when booked in advance. Source: Seat61.

How do I claim the 25% discount on the CAT for Eurovision 2026?

The 25% discount on the City Airport Train (CAT) is available to ESC 2026 ticket holders arriving at Vienna Airport (VIE). The price drops from €14.90 to around €11.18 for a single, and from €24.90 to ~€18.68 for a return. The exact redemption method (promo code, showing your ESC ticket, QR code) should be confirmed at cityairporttrain.com or via oeticket.com. Source: meinbezirk.at.

Which Vienna station do international trains arrive at?

All international trains (from London, Zurich, Milan, Brussels, Amsterdam, etc.) arrive at Wien Hauptbahnhof (Wien Hbf). Wien Westbahnhof has not served international trains since December 2015 — it handles only regional trains and the private Westbahn operator. Source: Seat61.

Does my Eurovision 2026 ticket include free public transport in Vienna?

Yes. Your Wiener Stadthalle show ticket (semi-finals or final) acts as a free travel pass on Wiener Linien (U-Bahn, trams, buses) across Vienna’s fare zones, on the day of your performance. This covers both the outward and return journey. Source: Wien.info FAQ ESC.

How much does a return train ticket from London to Vienna cost?

Booked in advance, a return from London to Vienna by Eurostar plus Nightjet costs around £150–£250. Book each ticket separately: Eurostar from £51 one-way, and Nightjet from €29.90 in a seat up to ~€189.90 for a private sleeper. Last-minute prices during Eurovision week can exceed £400 return. Source: The Trainline.

Is there a night train from Milan to Vienna for Eurovision?

Yes. The Nightjet NJ235 departs Milan Centrale at 21:26 and arrives at Wien Hauptbahnhof at 08:52, a journey of 11h42. It runs every day. Advance Sparschiene prices start at €29.90 in a reclining seat and around €50–90 in a couchette. The train also stops at Brescia, Verona, Vicenza and Padua. Source: nachtzug.net.

How do I get from Wien Hauptbahnhof to the Wiener Stadthalle?

The journey from Wien Hbf to the Wiener Stadthalle takes around 25–30 minutes by public transport. U6 Burggasse-Stadthalle is a 3-minute walk from the venue — take U4 from Wien Hbf to Längenfeldgasse, then change to U6 towards Floridsdorf. Tram 18 from Wien Hbf (~28 min) is a direct alternative. On the day of the show, your ESC ticket serves as a free travel pass. Source: Wiener Stadthalle.

Sources

Research completed 7 May 2026. Prices and timetables subject to change — confirm at oebb.at, eurostar.com or thetrainline.com before booking.

Ready to travel to Vienna for Eurovision 2026?

Whether you are heading from London, Zurich, Milan or Brussels, the train remains the most enjoyable — and most sustainable — way to reach the 70th Eurovision Song Contest. Discover all our European travel guides and itineraries on Pixidia.

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