Which stations in Berlin have ICE connections to Leipzig

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I am planning to move to Berlin but will travel twice per week to Leipzig. For this reason I want to choose an area that has good transport connections to Leipzig.



However, I can't seem to find any list of ICE routes between Leipzig and Berlin. So I have two questions:



1) from which stations in or near Berlin can one get an ICE train to/from Leipzig?



2) in general, how would I go about looking up something like this?










share|improve this question
























  • Berlin has really good light rail coverage. Essentially, most of the city's area is close to an ICE endpoint, because the S-Bahn gets you there pretty swiftly (and the fare is usually already included in your ticket to Leizpig).

    – Kilian Foth
    Jan 28 at 7:47







  • 1





    Almost all of the ICEs seem to go from Berlin Hbf via Berlin Südkreuz to Leipzig Hbf with 5 minutes traveling time between Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. For short commuting times to/from Leipzig you probably want to live so that you can reach either Berlin Hbf or Berlin Südkreuz quickly.

    – Trilarion
    Jan 28 at 12:07
















9















I am planning to move to Berlin but will travel twice per week to Leipzig. For this reason I want to choose an area that has good transport connections to Leipzig.



However, I can't seem to find any list of ICE routes between Leipzig and Berlin. So I have two questions:



1) from which stations in or near Berlin can one get an ICE train to/from Leipzig?



2) in general, how would I go about looking up something like this?










share|improve this question
























  • Berlin has really good light rail coverage. Essentially, most of the city's area is close to an ICE endpoint, because the S-Bahn gets you there pretty swiftly (and the fare is usually already included in your ticket to Leizpig).

    – Kilian Foth
    Jan 28 at 7:47







  • 1





    Almost all of the ICEs seem to go from Berlin Hbf via Berlin Südkreuz to Leipzig Hbf with 5 minutes traveling time between Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. For short commuting times to/from Leipzig you probably want to live so that you can reach either Berlin Hbf or Berlin Südkreuz quickly.

    – Trilarion
    Jan 28 at 12:07














9












9








9








I am planning to move to Berlin but will travel twice per week to Leipzig. For this reason I want to choose an area that has good transport connections to Leipzig.



However, I can't seem to find any list of ICE routes between Leipzig and Berlin. So I have two questions:



1) from which stations in or near Berlin can one get an ICE train to/from Leipzig?



2) in general, how would I go about looking up something like this?










share|improve this question
















I am planning to move to Berlin but will travel twice per week to Leipzig. For this reason I want to choose an area that has good transport connections to Leipzig.



However, I can't seem to find any list of ICE routes between Leipzig and Berlin. So I have two questions:



1) from which stations in or near Berlin can one get an ICE train to/from Leipzig?



2) in general, how would I go about looking up something like this?







trains germany berlin leipzig






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 29 at 13:01









rvs

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423310










asked Jan 27 at 11:36









NathanielNathaniel

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3081311












  • Berlin has really good light rail coverage. Essentially, most of the city's area is close to an ICE endpoint, because the S-Bahn gets you there pretty swiftly (and the fare is usually already included in your ticket to Leizpig).

    – Kilian Foth
    Jan 28 at 7:47







  • 1





    Almost all of the ICEs seem to go from Berlin Hbf via Berlin Südkreuz to Leipzig Hbf with 5 minutes traveling time between Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. For short commuting times to/from Leipzig you probably want to live so that you can reach either Berlin Hbf or Berlin Südkreuz quickly.

    – Trilarion
    Jan 28 at 12:07


















  • Berlin has really good light rail coverage. Essentially, most of the city's area is close to an ICE endpoint, because the S-Bahn gets you there pretty swiftly (and the fare is usually already included in your ticket to Leizpig).

    – Kilian Foth
    Jan 28 at 7:47







  • 1





    Almost all of the ICEs seem to go from Berlin Hbf via Berlin Südkreuz to Leipzig Hbf with 5 minutes traveling time between Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. For short commuting times to/from Leipzig you probably want to live so that you can reach either Berlin Hbf or Berlin Südkreuz quickly.

    – Trilarion
    Jan 28 at 12:07

















Berlin has really good light rail coverage. Essentially, most of the city's area is close to an ICE endpoint, because the S-Bahn gets you there pretty swiftly (and the fare is usually already included in your ticket to Leizpig).

– Kilian Foth
Jan 28 at 7:47






Berlin has really good light rail coverage. Essentially, most of the city's area is close to an ICE endpoint, because the S-Bahn gets you there pretty swiftly (and the fare is usually already included in your ticket to Leizpig).

– Kilian Foth
Jan 28 at 7:47





1




1





Almost all of the ICEs seem to go from Berlin Hbf via Berlin Südkreuz to Leipzig Hbf with 5 minutes traveling time between Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. For short commuting times to/from Leipzig you probably want to live so that you can reach either Berlin Hbf or Berlin Südkreuz quickly.

– Trilarion
Jan 28 at 12:07






Almost all of the ICEs seem to go from Berlin Hbf via Berlin Südkreuz to Leipzig Hbf with 5 minutes traveling time between Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. For short commuting times to/from Leipzig you probably want to live so that you can reach either Berlin Hbf or Berlin Südkreuz quickly.

– Trilarion
Jan 28 at 12:07











3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















14














1) There are three stops for ICE leaving Berlin in the direction of Leipzig: Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. The third one is either Berlin-Spandau or Berlin-Gesundbrunnen. The fifth station in Berlin that is served by ICE trains is Berlin Ostbahnhof, but there are no services from there to Leipzig.
You can reach any of the four possible starting points easily by local train, underground or other public transport.



2) Just search for the connection on the web pages of Deutsche Bahn, the main railway service in Germany, bahn.de.



You also have the option to generate a list of connections. Essentially there is an hourly ICE connection leaving between 5:00 and 21:00. See http://persoenlicherfahrplan.bahn.de.



Edit: Some additional advice: If you travel twice a week you'll quickly be eligible for the frequent traveler status "bahn.comfort". Don't miss out on that - among an occasional free ride it also gives you access to DB Lounges with free drinks in both Berlin and Leipzig.






share|improve this answer

























  • Your first point applies to the north-south direction. For east-west it is Spandau, Hbf and Ostbahnhof.

    – o.m.
    Jan 27 at 14:05











  • @o.m. Thanks, I also missed that some trains from Hamburg to Leipzig stop in Spandau but not Gesundbrunnen as well.

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 14:40











  • "Trains going West (Hannover, Göttingen) have a stop at Berlin Ost, but not at Gesundbrunnen." I think this sentence is confusing, even if formally correct. You probably meant to write they stop at Spandau, but not at Gesundbrunnen.

    – Jan
    Jan 27 at 16:56







  • 1





    @Jan Anything wrong with this?

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 16:58






  • 2





    Do not underestimate the commute times with public transport within Berlin. The long distance railway stations are definitely not easily reachable by public transport from anywhere in Berlin. If you live in the outskirts of Berlin, you can easily spend just as much time to get from your home to a long distance railway station in Berlin, as the train from Berlin to Leipzig takes.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Jan 27 at 19:49


















13














As the travel is in Germany, I would go to the German rail planner Bahn.de, which has the option to select 'all stations' for cities. (It is available in many languages, I have selected the English version here.)



When you enter the name of a city the site knows has several stations, it gives the name in all capital letters as well as in normal capitalization with the names of the different stations.

Run the search with the city name in capital letters and you will get all efficient travels in the results, each with the station used for the travel.



If you select one station in your departing city, you will still get results, some of which may have the trains you are looking for, but maybe not all of them. And if you selected the 'wrong' station you will often get a short hop to a near station and a change trains.



While traveling within Germany, this planner allows you to state your actual departure address (home or hotel for instance) and your actual arrival address, and it will tell you which local transport to the station you can use and so on. In which case it will always go for the one best suited for your long distance travel. (But it may still take a short hop to an out of town station if that happens to be a shorter overall trip.)



If you use a rail (or general travel) planner which does not allow for an 'all stations' option, just select one station at random, run the search and repeat with a different station till you get a clear picture which station is the best for your journey.



For your city pair of Berlin and Leipzig, both cities get the Hauptbahnhof indicated. With for Berlin the addition of 'tief'.
Click on Details for this journey and you get more information.
If that is not enough for your (it might not be for me) you can either use the map option, zoom in till you get the details for the station you want to know more about, or use the option of more details for the stations, which includes the full address of the stations, one at a time.



If you want to start from a different than the indicated station or want to get off at a different one, you can, again in the details, get 'Show intermediate stops' and see which alternative stops this one train stops.



I do not see it on this site but many rail planners show 'all trains from this station'. Which will help you with alternative times for the same route.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    The tief addition is because Berlin Hbf consists of two levels of platforms. This specifies this lower set.

    – JAD
    Jan 28 at 7:58











  • I promoted your version in my answer, but actually searching for connections starting in BERLIN, all I get is Berlin Hbf. Are you sure "you will get all efficient travels in the results"? Of course, using the real starting address (or S-/U-Bahn stop) is the way you go - if you know it. If you want to select convenient hotels, apartments etc. then this is not helpful...

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:19



















0














This answer completes Willeke's great suggestion, which I think covers pretty well how to find out which station is the best for you to choose. Since you asked explicitely how to find out which stations you can use, I want to suggest another way, in case the search with capital letters (i.e. BERLIN) doesn't satisfy your needs. This is looking at the list of trains arriving in Leipzig from Berlin and checking which stations they stop at. You can do this using the Webpage (somewhat limited) or the App.



Webpage:
This service is not available in English and a little more tedious than using the App. You go to www.bahn.de, click on "Reise & Services" and select "Fahrpläne" (schedules). Then you select "Abfahrts- und Ankunftspläne" (Departure and arrival tables), which will allow you to download the yellow (departure) and white (arrival) timetables that are present in German railway stations. You can also reach this page by typing "Ankunft" in the search field of bahn.de and selecting the first result ("Abfahrts- & Ankunftspläne für Deutschland zum Download").



Now you can type the name of the city your are travelling to and select the correct train station and time table - we want Leipzig Hbf, Ankunft (arrival) and the time you are interested in.



enter image description here



Now you can skim through the time table and see where the ICE's arriving in Leipzig stop in Berlin. I do not recommend to use this as the only tool for planning your journey though, especially if do not understand German, since there are many annotations which might be hard to understand - for example "Nur Sa." (saturday only).



DB Navigator App



You can get a similar result more easily in the App. I have it in German, so I am unsure about the correct names, but basically you press on the menu button and select "Abfahrt/Ankunft" (Departure/Arrival). Then you select "Ankunft" (Arrival), type in the station you want to know, the time you want to arrive at your destination, and "Richtung", the direction you are coming from - in this case I would select "BERLIN". Then you can select the modes of Transport ("Verkehrsmittel") you are interested in - here you can exclude everything besides ICE (though it might be worth it to check for IC as well). After clicking "Suchen" (search), you are presented with the next alternative for your query, "Später" (later) gives you other examples. By clicking on it you can see the different stops, among them the ones in Berlin.




To clarify, this is pretty tedious. If you only want to know how to get from your location in Berlin to Leipzig as fast as possible, Willeke's answer is the way to go. However, if you want to know where you can jump on the trains to Leipzig, e.g. for deciding where to look for an appartment in Berlin while traveling to Leipzig regularly, these tools might be helpful.






share|improve this answer























  • That's a complicated way. Did you check the link I added to my answer? There you'll get one comprehensive table for each of the 4 possible starting points. These tables include also all connections with a train change (unless you select to not see them).

    – asdfex
    Jan 28 at 16:15











  • @asdfex I agree it is complicated, but I do not know any other way that allows you to check for all stations in Berlin. Your link only showed me Berlin Hbf, even when I just typed BERLIN as departure point.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 9:58











  • As i said, you have to do it for each station - you can find them in the map with all ICE services. You can also use the "Kursbuch" that essentially contains three possible Berlin stops (the fourth one you can infer with some knowledge), but is separated into two tables. kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe

    – asdfex
    Jan 29 at 10:11












  • @asdfex Well, I don't think it's more complicated than trying to find the map including all ICE stations (which I couldn't) and then to check for all of those (that would be 4 queries, mine is one). Especially the app version, since this one filters out only the relevant trains. I think my answer adds an alternative that has its merit for specific situations. Also, I don't think your answer to question 2) is too helpful - this is where I concentrate on, since this method easily can be used for example for Hamburg or Munich.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:21












  • actually 5 queries if you do not know the ICE lines in advance, since you would have to include Ostbahnhof as well

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:28










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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









14














1) There are three stops for ICE leaving Berlin in the direction of Leipzig: Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. The third one is either Berlin-Spandau or Berlin-Gesundbrunnen. The fifth station in Berlin that is served by ICE trains is Berlin Ostbahnhof, but there are no services from there to Leipzig.
You can reach any of the four possible starting points easily by local train, underground or other public transport.



2) Just search for the connection on the web pages of Deutsche Bahn, the main railway service in Germany, bahn.de.



You also have the option to generate a list of connections. Essentially there is an hourly ICE connection leaving between 5:00 and 21:00. See http://persoenlicherfahrplan.bahn.de.



Edit: Some additional advice: If you travel twice a week you'll quickly be eligible for the frequent traveler status "bahn.comfort". Don't miss out on that - among an occasional free ride it also gives you access to DB Lounges with free drinks in both Berlin and Leipzig.






share|improve this answer

























  • Your first point applies to the north-south direction. For east-west it is Spandau, Hbf and Ostbahnhof.

    – o.m.
    Jan 27 at 14:05











  • @o.m. Thanks, I also missed that some trains from Hamburg to Leipzig stop in Spandau but not Gesundbrunnen as well.

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 14:40











  • "Trains going West (Hannover, Göttingen) have a stop at Berlin Ost, but not at Gesundbrunnen." I think this sentence is confusing, even if formally correct. You probably meant to write they stop at Spandau, but not at Gesundbrunnen.

    – Jan
    Jan 27 at 16:56







  • 1





    @Jan Anything wrong with this?

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 16:58






  • 2





    Do not underestimate the commute times with public transport within Berlin. The long distance railway stations are definitely not easily reachable by public transport from anywhere in Berlin. If you live in the outskirts of Berlin, you can easily spend just as much time to get from your home to a long distance railway station in Berlin, as the train from Berlin to Leipzig takes.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Jan 27 at 19:49















14














1) There are three stops for ICE leaving Berlin in the direction of Leipzig: Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. The third one is either Berlin-Spandau or Berlin-Gesundbrunnen. The fifth station in Berlin that is served by ICE trains is Berlin Ostbahnhof, but there are no services from there to Leipzig.
You can reach any of the four possible starting points easily by local train, underground or other public transport.



2) Just search for the connection on the web pages of Deutsche Bahn, the main railway service in Germany, bahn.de.



You also have the option to generate a list of connections. Essentially there is an hourly ICE connection leaving between 5:00 and 21:00. See http://persoenlicherfahrplan.bahn.de.



Edit: Some additional advice: If you travel twice a week you'll quickly be eligible for the frequent traveler status "bahn.comfort". Don't miss out on that - among an occasional free ride it also gives you access to DB Lounges with free drinks in both Berlin and Leipzig.






share|improve this answer

























  • Your first point applies to the north-south direction. For east-west it is Spandau, Hbf and Ostbahnhof.

    – o.m.
    Jan 27 at 14:05











  • @o.m. Thanks, I also missed that some trains from Hamburg to Leipzig stop in Spandau but not Gesundbrunnen as well.

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 14:40











  • "Trains going West (Hannover, Göttingen) have a stop at Berlin Ost, but not at Gesundbrunnen." I think this sentence is confusing, even if formally correct. You probably meant to write they stop at Spandau, but not at Gesundbrunnen.

    – Jan
    Jan 27 at 16:56







  • 1





    @Jan Anything wrong with this?

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 16:58






  • 2





    Do not underestimate the commute times with public transport within Berlin. The long distance railway stations are definitely not easily reachable by public transport from anywhere in Berlin. If you live in the outskirts of Berlin, you can easily spend just as much time to get from your home to a long distance railway station in Berlin, as the train from Berlin to Leipzig takes.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Jan 27 at 19:49













14












14








14







1) There are three stops for ICE leaving Berlin in the direction of Leipzig: Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. The third one is either Berlin-Spandau or Berlin-Gesundbrunnen. The fifth station in Berlin that is served by ICE trains is Berlin Ostbahnhof, but there are no services from there to Leipzig.
You can reach any of the four possible starting points easily by local train, underground or other public transport.



2) Just search for the connection on the web pages of Deutsche Bahn, the main railway service in Germany, bahn.de.



You also have the option to generate a list of connections. Essentially there is an hourly ICE connection leaving between 5:00 and 21:00. See http://persoenlicherfahrplan.bahn.de.



Edit: Some additional advice: If you travel twice a week you'll quickly be eligible for the frequent traveler status "bahn.comfort". Don't miss out on that - among an occasional free ride it also gives you access to DB Lounges with free drinks in both Berlin and Leipzig.






share|improve this answer















1) There are three stops for ICE leaving Berlin in the direction of Leipzig: Berlin Hbf and Berlin Südkreuz. The third one is either Berlin-Spandau or Berlin-Gesundbrunnen. The fifth station in Berlin that is served by ICE trains is Berlin Ostbahnhof, but there are no services from there to Leipzig.
You can reach any of the four possible starting points easily by local train, underground or other public transport.



2) Just search for the connection on the web pages of Deutsche Bahn, the main railway service in Germany, bahn.de.



You also have the option to generate a list of connections. Essentially there is an hourly ICE connection leaving between 5:00 and 21:00. See http://persoenlicherfahrplan.bahn.de.



Edit: Some additional advice: If you travel twice a week you'll quickly be eligible for the frequent traveler status "bahn.comfort". Don't miss out on that - among an occasional free ride it also gives you access to DB Lounges with free drinks in both Berlin and Leipzig.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 29 at 12:46

























answered Jan 27 at 12:11









asdfexasdfex

2,1161216




2,1161216












  • Your first point applies to the north-south direction. For east-west it is Spandau, Hbf and Ostbahnhof.

    – o.m.
    Jan 27 at 14:05











  • @o.m. Thanks, I also missed that some trains from Hamburg to Leipzig stop in Spandau but not Gesundbrunnen as well.

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 14:40











  • "Trains going West (Hannover, Göttingen) have a stop at Berlin Ost, but not at Gesundbrunnen." I think this sentence is confusing, even if formally correct. You probably meant to write they stop at Spandau, but not at Gesundbrunnen.

    – Jan
    Jan 27 at 16:56







  • 1





    @Jan Anything wrong with this?

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 16:58






  • 2





    Do not underestimate the commute times with public transport within Berlin. The long distance railway stations are definitely not easily reachable by public transport from anywhere in Berlin. If you live in the outskirts of Berlin, you can easily spend just as much time to get from your home to a long distance railway station in Berlin, as the train from Berlin to Leipzig takes.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Jan 27 at 19:49

















  • Your first point applies to the north-south direction. For east-west it is Spandau, Hbf and Ostbahnhof.

    – o.m.
    Jan 27 at 14:05











  • @o.m. Thanks, I also missed that some trains from Hamburg to Leipzig stop in Spandau but not Gesundbrunnen as well.

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 14:40











  • "Trains going West (Hannover, Göttingen) have a stop at Berlin Ost, but not at Gesundbrunnen." I think this sentence is confusing, even if formally correct. You probably meant to write they stop at Spandau, but not at Gesundbrunnen.

    – Jan
    Jan 27 at 16:56







  • 1





    @Jan Anything wrong with this?

    – asdfex
    Jan 27 at 16:58






  • 2





    Do not underestimate the commute times with public transport within Berlin. The long distance railway stations are definitely not easily reachable by public transport from anywhere in Berlin. If you live in the outskirts of Berlin, you can easily spend just as much time to get from your home to a long distance railway station in Berlin, as the train from Berlin to Leipzig takes.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Jan 27 at 19:49
















Your first point applies to the north-south direction. For east-west it is Spandau, Hbf and Ostbahnhof.

– o.m.
Jan 27 at 14:05





Your first point applies to the north-south direction. For east-west it is Spandau, Hbf and Ostbahnhof.

– o.m.
Jan 27 at 14:05













@o.m. Thanks, I also missed that some trains from Hamburg to Leipzig stop in Spandau but not Gesundbrunnen as well.

– asdfex
Jan 27 at 14:40





@o.m. Thanks, I also missed that some trains from Hamburg to Leipzig stop in Spandau but not Gesundbrunnen as well.

– asdfex
Jan 27 at 14:40













"Trains going West (Hannover, Göttingen) have a stop at Berlin Ost, but not at Gesundbrunnen." I think this sentence is confusing, even if formally correct. You probably meant to write they stop at Spandau, but not at Gesundbrunnen.

– Jan
Jan 27 at 16:56






"Trains going West (Hannover, Göttingen) have a stop at Berlin Ost, but not at Gesundbrunnen." I think this sentence is confusing, even if formally correct. You probably meant to write they stop at Spandau, but not at Gesundbrunnen.

– Jan
Jan 27 at 16:56





1




1





@Jan Anything wrong with this?

– asdfex
Jan 27 at 16:58





@Jan Anything wrong with this?

– asdfex
Jan 27 at 16:58




2




2





Do not underestimate the commute times with public transport within Berlin. The long distance railway stations are definitely not easily reachable by public transport from anywhere in Berlin. If you live in the outskirts of Berlin, you can easily spend just as much time to get from your home to a long distance railway station in Berlin, as the train from Berlin to Leipzig takes.

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
Jan 27 at 19:49





Do not underestimate the commute times with public transport within Berlin. The long distance railway stations are definitely not easily reachable by public transport from anywhere in Berlin. If you live in the outskirts of Berlin, you can easily spend just as much time to get from your home to a long distance railway station in Berlin, as the train from Berlin to Leipzig takes.

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
Jan 27 at 19:49













13














As the travel is in Germany, I would go to the German rail planner Bahn.de, which has the option to select 'all stations' for cities. (It is available in many languages, I have selected the English version here.)



When you enter the name of a city the site knows has several stations, it gives the name in all capital letters as well as in normal capitalization with the names of the different stations.

Run the search with the city name in capital letters and you will get all efficient travels in the results, each with the station used for the travel.



If you select one station in your departing city, you will still get results, some of which may have the trains you are looking for, but maybe not all of them. And if you selected the 'wrong' station you will often get a short hop to a near station and a change trains.



While traveling within Germany, this planner allows you to state your actual departure address (home or hotel for instance) and your actual arrival address, and it will tell you which local transport to the station you can use and so on. In which case it will always go for the one best suited for your long distance travel. (But it may still take a short hop to an out of town station if that happens to be a shorter overall trip.)



If you use a rail (or general travel) planner which does not allow for an 'all stations' option, just select one station at random, run the search and repeat with a different station till you get a clear picture which station is the best for your journey.



For your city pair of Berlin and Leipzig, both cities get the Hauptbahnhof indicated. With for Berlin the addition of 'tief'.
Click on Details for this journey and you get more information.
If that is not enough for your (it might not be for me) you can either use the map option, zoom in till you get the details for the station you want to know more about, or use the option of more details for the stations, which includes the full address of the stations, one at a time.



If you want to start from a different than the indicated station or want to get off at a different one, you can, again in the details, get 'Show intermediate stops' and see which alternative stops this one train stops.



I do not see it on this site but many rail planners show 'all trains from this station'. Which will help you with alternative times for the same route.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    The tief addition is because Berlin Hbf consists of two levels of platforms. This specifies this lower set.

    – JAD
    Jan 28 at 7:58











  • I promoted your version in my answer, but actually searching for connections starting in BERLIN, all I get is Berlin Hbf. Are you sure "you will get all efficient travels in the results"? Of course, using the real starting address (or S-/U-Bahn stop) is the way you go - if you know it. If you want to select convenient hotels, apartments etc. then this is not helpful...

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:19
















13














As the travel is in Germany, I would go to the German rail planner Bahn.de, which has the option to select 'all stations' for cities. (It is available in many languages, I have selected the English version here.)



When you enter the name of a city the site knows has several stations, it gives the name in all capital letters as well as in normal capitalization with the names of the different stations.

Run the search with the city name in capital letters and you will get all efficient travels in the results, each with the station used for the travel.



If you select one station in your departing city, you will still get results, some of which may have the trains you are looking for, but maybe not all of them. And if you selected the 'wrong' station you will often get a short hop to a near station and a change trains.



While traveling within Germany, this planner allows you to state your actual departure address (home or hotel for instance) and your actual arrival address, and it will tell you which local transport to the station you can use and so on. In which case it will always go for the one best suited for your long distance travel. (But it may still take a short hop to an out of town station if that happens to be a shorter overall trip.)



If you use a rail (or general travel) planner which does not allow for an 'all stations' option, just select one station at random, run the search and repeat with a different station till you get a clear picture which station is the best for your journey.



For your city pair of Berlin and Leipzig, both cities get the Hauptbahnhof indicated. With for Berlin the addition of 'tief'.
Click on Details for this journey and you get more information.
If that is not enough for your (it might not be for me) you can either use the map option, zoom in till you get the details for the station you want to know more about, or use the option of more details for the stations, which includes the full address of the stations, one at a time.



If you want to start from a different than the indicated station or want to get off at a different one, you can, again in the details, get 'Show intermediate stops' and see which alternative stops this one train stops.



I do not see it on this site but many rail planners show 'all trains from this station'. Which will help you with alternative times for the same route.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    The tief addition is because Berlin Hbf consists of two levels of platforms. This specifies this lower set.

    – JAD
    Jan 28 at 7:58











  • I promoted your version in my answer, but actually searching for connections starting in BERLIN, all I get is Berlin Hbf. Are you sure "you will get all efficient travels in the results"? Of course, using the real starting address (or S-/U-Bahn stop) is the way you go - if you know it. If you want to select convenient hotels, apartments etc. then this is not helpful...

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:19














13












13








13







As the travel is in Germany, I would go to the German rail planner Bahn.de, which has the option to select 'all stations' for cities. (It is available in many languages, I have selected the English version here.)



When you enter the name of a city the site knows has several stations, it gives the name in all capital letters as well as in normal capitalization with the names of the different stations.

Run the search with the city name in capital letters and you will get all efficient travels in the results, each with the station used for the travel.



If you select one station in your departing city, you will still get results, some of which may have the trains you are looking for, but maybe not all of them. And if you selected the 'wrong' station you will often get a short hop to a near station and a change trains.



While traveling within Germany, this planner allows you to state your actual departure address (home or hotel for instance) and your actual arrival address, and it will tell you which local transport to the station you can use and so on. In which case it will always go for the one best suited for your long distance travel. (But it may still take a short hop to an out of town station if that happens to be a shorter overall trip.)



If you use a rail (or general travel) planner which does not allow for an 'all stations' option, just select one station at random, run the search and repeat with a different station till you get a clear picture which station is the best for your journey.



For your city pair of Berlin and Leipzig, both cities get the Hauptbahnhof indicated. With for Berlin the addition of 'tief'.
Click on Details for this journey and you get more information.
If that is not enough for your (it might not be for me) you can either use the map option, zoom in till you get the details for the station you want to know more about, or use the option of more details for the stations, which includes the full address of the stations, one at a time.



If you want to start from a different than the indicated station or want to get off at a different one, you can, again in the details, get 'Show intermediate stops' and see which alternative stops this one train stops.



I do not see it on this site but many rail planners show 'all trains from this station'. Which will help you with alternative times for the same route.






share|improve this answer















As the travel is in Germany, I would go to the German rail planner Bahn.de, which has the option to select 'all stations' for cities. (It is available in many languages, I have selected the English version here.)



When you enter the name of a city the site knows has several stations, it gives the name in all capital letters as well as in normal capitalization with the names of the different stations.

Run the search with the city name in capital letters and you will get all efficient travels in the results, each with the station used for the travel.



If you select one station in your departing city, you will still get results, some of which may have the trains you are looking for, but maybe not all of them. And if you selected the 'wrong' station you will often get a short hop to a near station and a change trains.



While traveling within Germany, this planner allows you to state your actual departure address (home or hotel for instance) and your actual arrival address, and it will tell you which local transport to the station you can use and so on. In which case it will always go for the one best suited for your long distance travel. (But it may still take a short hop to an out of town station if that happens to be a shorter overall trip.)



If you use a rail (or general travel) planner which does not allow for an 'all stations' option, just select one station at random, run the search and repeat with a different station till you get a clear picture which station is the best for your journey.



For your city pair of Berlin and Leipzig, both cities get the Hauptbahnhof indicated. With for Berlin the addition of 'tief'.
Click on Details for this journey and you get more information.
If that is not enough for your (it might not be for me) you can either use the map option, zoom in till you get the details for the station you want to know more about, or use the option of more details for the stations, which includes the full address of the stations, one at a time.



If you want to start from a different than the indicated station or want to get off at a different one, you can, again in the details, get 'Show intermediate stops' and see which alternative stops this one train stops.



I do not see it on this site but many rail planners show 'all trains from this station'. Which will help you with alternative times for the same route.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 27 at 15:29

























answered Jan 27 at 12:12









WillekeWilleke

31k1087163




31k1087163







  • 1





    The tief addition is because Berlin Hbf consists of two levels of platforms. This specifies this lower set.

    – JAD
    Jan 28 at 7:58











  • I promoted your version in my answer, but actually searching for connections starting in BERLIN, all I get is Berlin Hbf. Are you sure "you will get all efficient travels in the results"? Of course, using the real starting address (or S-/U-Bahn stop) is the way you go - if you know it. If you want to select convenient hotels, apartments etc. then this is not helpful...

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:19













  • 1





    The tief addition is because Berlin Hbf consists of two levels of platforms. This specifies this lower set.

    – JAD
    Jan 28 at 7:58











  • I promoted your version in my answer, but actually searching for connections starting in BERLIN, all I get is Berlin Hbf. Are you sure "you will get all efficient travels in the results"? Of course, using the real starting address (or S-/U-Bahn stop) is the way you go - if you know it. If you want to select convenient hotels, apartments etc. then this is not helpful...

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:19








1




1





The tief addition is because Berlin Hbf consists of two levels of platforms. This specifies this lower set.

– JAD
Jan 28 at 7:58





The tief addition is because Berlin Hbf consists of two levels of platforms. This specifies this lower set.

– JAD
Jan 28 at 7:58













I promoted your version in my answer, but actually searching for connections starting in BERLIN, all I get is Berlin Hbf. Are you sure "you will get all efficient travels in the results"? Of course, using the real starting address (or S-/U-Bahn stop) is the way you go - if you know it. If you want to select convenient hotels, apartments etc. then this is not helpful...

– Paul Paulsen
Jan 29 at 10:19






I promoted your version in my answer, but actually searching for connections starting in BERLIN, all I get is Berlin Hbf. Are you sure "you will get all efficient travels in the results"? Of course, using the real starting address (or S-/U-Bahn stop) is the way you go - if you know it. If you want to select convenient hotels, apartments etc. then this is not helpful...

– Paul Paulsen
Jan 29 at 10:19












0














This answer completes Willeke's great suggestion, which I think covers pretty well how to find out which station is the best for you to choose. Since you asked explicitely how to find out which stations you can use, I want to suggest another way, in case the search with capital letters (i.e. BERLIN) doesn't satisfy your needs. This is looking at the list of trains arriving in Leipzig from Berlin and checking which stations they stop at. You can do this using the Webpage (somewhat limited) or the App.



Webpage:
This service is not available in English and a little more tedious than using the App. You go to www.bahn.de, click on "Reise & Services" and select "Fahrpläne" (schedules). Then you select "Abfahrts- und Ankunftspläne" (Departure and arrival tables), which will allow you to download the yellow (departure) and white (arrival) timetables that are present in German railway stations. You can also reach this page by typing "Ankunft" in the search field of bahn.de and selecting the first result ("Abfahrts- & Ankunftspläne für Deutschland zum Download").



Now you can type the name of the city your are travelling to and select the correct train station and time table - we want Leipzig Hbf, Ankunft (arrival) and the time you are interested in.



enter image description here



Now you can skim through the time table and see where the ICE's arriving in Leipzig stop in Berlin. I do not recommend to use this as the only tool for planning your journey though, especially if do not understand German, since there are many annotations which might be hard to understand - for example "Nur Sa." (saturday only).



DB Navigator App



You can get a similar result more easily in the App. I have it in German, so I am unsure about the correct names, but basically you press on the menu button and select "Abfahrt/Ankunft" (Departure/Arrival). Then you select "Ankunft" (Arrival), type in the station you want to know, the time you want to arrive at your destination, and "Richtung", the direction you are coming from - in this case I would select "BERLIN". Then you can select the modes of Transport ("Verkehrsmittel") you are interested in - here you can exclude everything besides ICE (though it might be worth it to check for IC as well). After clicking "Suchen" (search), you are presented with the next alternative for your query, "Später" (later) gives you other examples. By clicking on it you can see the different stops, among them the ones in Berlin.




To clarify, this is pretty tedious. If you only want to know how to get from your location in Berlin to Leipzig as fast as possible, Willeke's answer is the way to go. However, if you want to know where you can jump on the trains to Leipzig, e.g. for deciding where to look for an appartment in Berlin while traveling to Leipzig regularly, these tools might be helpful.






share|improve this answer























  • That's a complicated way. Did you check the link I added to my answer? There you'll get one comprehensive table for each of the 4 possible starting points. These tables include also all connections with a train change (unless you select to not see them).

    – asdfex
    Jan 28 at 16:15











  • @asdfex I agree it is complicated, but I do not know any other way that allows you to check for all stations in Berlin. Your link only showed me Berlin Hbf, even when I just typed BERLIN as departure point.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 9:58











  • As i said, you have to do it for each station - you can find them in the map with all ICE services. You can also use the "Kursbuch" that essentially contains three possible Berlin stops (the fourth one you can infer with some knowledge), but is separated into two tables. kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe

    – asdfex
    Jan 29 at 10:11












  • @asdfex Well, I don't think it's more complicated than trying to find the map including all ICE stations (which I couldn't) and then to check for all of those (that would be 4 queries, mine is one). Especially the app version, since this one filters out only the relevant trains. I think my answer adds an alternative that has its merit for specific situations. Also, I don't think your answer to question 2) is too helpful - this is where I concentrate on, since this method easily can be used for example for Hamburg or Munich.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:21












  • actually 5 queries if you do not know the ICE lines in advance, since you would have to include Ostbahnhof as well

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:28















0














This answer completes Willeke's great suggestion, which I think covers pretty well how to find out which station is the best for you to choose. Since you asked explicitely how to find out which stations you can use, I want to suggest another way, in case the search with capital letters (i.e. BERLIN) doesn't satisfy your needs. This is looking at the list of trains arriving in Leipzig from Berlin and checking which stations they stop at. You can do this using the Webpage (somewhat limited) or the App.



Webpage:
This service is not available in English and a little more tedious than using the App. You go to www.bahn.de, click on "Reise & Services" and select "Fahrpläne" (schedules). Then you select "Abfahrts- und Ankunftspläne" (Departure and arrival tables), which will allow you to download the yellow (departure) and white (arrival) timetables that are present in German railway stations. You can also reach this page by typing "Ankunft" in the search field of bahn.de and selecting the first result ("Abfahrts- & Ankunftspläne für Deutschland zum Download").



Now you can type the name of the city your are travelling to and select the correct train station and time table - we want Leipzig Hbf, Ankunft (arrival) and the time you are interested in.



enter image description here



Now you can skim through the time table and see where the ICE's arriving in Leipzig stop in Berlin. I do not recommend to use this as the only tool for planning your journey though, especially if do not understand German, since there are many annotations which might be hard to understand - for example "Nur Sa." (saturday only).



DB Navigator App



You can get a similar result more easily in the App. I have it in German, so I am unsure about the correct names, but basically you press on the menu button and select "Abfahrt/Ankunft" (Departure/Arrival). Then you select "Ankunft" (Arrival), type in the station you want to know, the time you want to arrive at your destination, and "Richtung", the direction you are coming from - in this case I would select "BERLIN". Then you can select the modes of Transport ("Verkehrsmittel") you are interested in - here you can exclude everything besides ICE (though it might be worth it to check for IC as well). After clicking "Suchen" (search), you are presented with the next alternative for your query, "Später" (later) gives you other examples. By clicking on it you can see the different stops, among them the ones in Berlin.




To clarify, this is pretty tedious. If you only want to know how to get from your location in Berlin to Leipzig as fast as possible, Willeke's answer is the way to go. However, if you want to know where you can jump on the trains to Leipzig, e.g. for deciding where to look for an appartment in Berlin while traveling to Leipzig regularly, these tools might be helpful.






share|improve this answer























  • That's a complicated way. Did you check the link I added to my answer? There you'll get one comprehensive table for each of the 4 possible starting points. These tables include also all connections with a train change (unless you select to not see them).

    – asdfex
    Jan 28 at 16:15











  • @asdfex I agree it is complicated, but I do not know any other way that allows you to check for all stations in Berlin. Your link only showed me Berlin Hbf, even when I just typed BERLIN as departure point.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 9:58











  • As i said, you have to do it for each station - you can find them in the map with all ICE services. You can also use the "Kursbuch" that essentially contains three possible Berlin stops (the fourth one you can infer with some knowledge), but is separated into two tables. kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe

    – asdfex
    Jan 29 at 10:11












  • @asdfex Well, I don't think it's more complicated than trying to find the map including all ICE stations (which I couldn't) and then to check for all of those (that would be 4 queries, mine is one). Especially the app version, since this one filters out only the relevant trains. I think my answer adds an alternative that has its merit for specific situations. Also, I don't think your answer to question 2) is too helpful - this is where I concentrate on, since this method easily can be used for example for Hamburg or Munich.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:21












  • actually 5 queries if you do not know the ICE lines in advance, since you would have to include Ostbahnhof as well

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:28













0












0








0







This answer completes Willeke's great suggestion, which I think covers pretty well how to find out which station is the best for you to choose. Since you asked explicitely how to find out which stations you can use, I want to suggest another way, in case the search with capital letters (i.e. BERLIN) doesn't satisfy your needs. This is looking at the list of trains arriving in Leipzig from Berlin and checking which stations they stop at. You can do this using the Webpage (somewhat limited) or the App.



Webpage:
This service is not available in English and a little more tedious than using the App. You go to www.bahn.de, click on "Reise & Services" and select "Fahrpläne" (schedules). Then you select "Abfahrts- und Ankunftspläne" (Departure and arrival tables), which will allow you to download the yellow (departure) and white (arrival) timetables that are present in German railway stations. You can also reach this page by typing "Ankunft" in the search field of bahn.de and selecting the first result ("Abfahrts- & Ankunftspläne für Deutschland zum Download").



Now you can type the name of the city your are travelling to and select the correct train station and time table - we want Leipzig Hbf, Ankunft (arrival) and the time you are interested in.



enter image description here



Now you can skim through the time table and see where the ICE's arriving in Leipzig stop in Berlin. I do not recommend to use this as the only tool for planning your journey though, especially if do not understand German, since there are many annotations which might be hard to understand - for example "Nur Sa." (saturday only).



DB Navigator App



You can get a similar result more easily in the App. I have it in German, so I am unsure about the correct names, but basically you press on the menu button and select "Abfahrt/Ankunft" (Departure/Arrival). Then you select "Ankunft" (Arrival), type in the station you want to know, the time you want to arrive at your destination, and "Richtung", the direction you are coming from - in this case I would select "BERLIN". Then you can select the modes of Transport ("Verkehrsmittel") you are interested in - here you can exclude everything besides ICE (though it might be worth it to check for IC as well). After clicking "Suchen" (search), you are presented with the next alternative for your query, "Später" (later) gives you other examples. By clicking on it you can see the different stops, among them the ones in Berlin.




To clarify, this is pretty tedious. If you only want to know how to get from your location in Berlin to Leipzig as fast as possible, Willeke's answer is the way to go. However, if you want to know where you can jump on the trains to Leipzig, e.g. for deciding where to look for an appartment in Berlin while traveling to Leipzig regularly, these tools might be helpful.






share|improve this answer













This answer completes Willeke's great suggestion, which I think covers pretty well how to find out which station is the best for you to choose. Since you asked explicitely how to find out which stations you can use, I want to suggest another way, in case the search with capital letters (i.e. BERLIN) doesn't satisfy your needs. This is looking at the list of trains arriving in Leipzig from Berlin and checking which stations they stop at. You can do this using the Webpage (somewhat limited) or the App.



Webpage:
This service is not available in English and a little more tedious than using the App. You go to www.bahn.de, click on "Reise & Services" and select "Fahrpläne" (schedules). Then you select "Abfahrts- und Ankunftspläne" (Departure and arrival tables), which will allow you to download the yellow (departure) and white (arrival) timetables that are present in German railway stations. You can also reach this page by typing "Ankunft" in the search field of bahn.de and selecting the first result ("Abfahrts- & Ankunftspläne für Deutschland zum Download").



Now you can type the name of the city your are travelling to and select the correct train station and time table - we want Leipzig Hbf, Ankunft (arrival) and the time you are interested in.



enter image description here



Now you can skim through the time table and see where the ICE's arriving in Leipzig stop in Berlin. I do not recommend to use this as the only tool for planning your journey though, especially if do not understand German, since there are many annotations which might be hard to understand - for example "Nur Sa." (saturday only).



DB Navigator App



You can get a similar result more easily in the App. I have it in German, so I am unsure about the correct names, but basically you press on the menu button and select "Abfahrt/Ankunft" (Departure/Arrival). Then you select "Ankunft" (Arrival), type in the station you want to know, the time you want to arrive at your destination, and "Richtung", the direction you are coming from - in this case I would select "BERLIN". Then you can select the modes of Transport ("Verkehrsmittel") you are interested in - here you can exclude everything besides ICE (though it might be worth it to check for IC as well). After clicking "Suchen" (search), you are presented with the next alternative for your query, "Später" (later) gives you other examples. By clicking on it you can see the different stops, among them the ones in Berlin.




To clarify, this is pretty tedious. If you only want to know how to get from your location in Berlin to Leipzig as fast as possible, Willeke's answer is the way to go. However, if you want to know where you can jump on the trains to Leipzig, e.g. for deciding where to look for an appartment in Berlin while traveling to Leipzig regularly, these tools might be helpful.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 28 at 14:54









Paul PaulsenPaul Paulsen

1063




1063












  • That's a complicated way. Did you check the link I added to my answer? There you'll get one comprehensive table for each of the 4 possible starting points. These tables include also all connections with a train change (unless you select to not see them).

    – asdfex
    Jan 28 at 16:15











  • @asdfex I agree it is complicated, but I do not know any other way that allows you to check for all stations in Berlin. Your link only showed me Berlin Hbf, even when I just typed BERLIN as departure point.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 9:58











  • As i said, you have to do it for each station - you can find them in the map with all ICE services. You can also use the "Kursbuch" that essentially contains three possible Berlin stops (the fourth one you can infer with some knowledge), but is separated into two tables. kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe

    – asdfex
    Jan 29 at 10:11












  • @asdfex Well, I don't think it's more complicated than trying to find the map including all ICE stations (which I couldn't) and then to check for all of those (that would be 4 queries, mine is one). Especially the app version, since this one filters out only the relevant trains. I think my answer adds an alternative that has its merit for specific situations. Also, I don't think your answer to question 2) is too helpful - this is where I concentrate on, since this method easily can be used for example for Hamburg or Munich.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:21












  • actually 5 queries if you do not know the ICE lines in advance, since you would have to include Ostbahnhof as well

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:28

















  • That's a complicated way. Did you check the link I added to my answer? There you'll get one comprehensive table for each of the 4 possible starting points. These tables include also all connections with a train change (unless you select to not see them).

    – asdfex
    Jan 28 at 16:15











  • @asdfex I agree it is complicated, but I do not know any other way that allows you to check for all stations in Berlin. Your link only showed me Berlin Hbf, even when I just typed BERLIN as departure point.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 9:58











  • As i said, you have to do it for each station - you can find them in the map with all ICE services. You can also use the "Kursbuch" that essentially contains three possible Berlin stops (the fourth one you can infer with some knowledge), but is separated into two tables. kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe

    – asdfex
    Jan 29 at 10:11












  • @asdfex Well, I don't think it's more complicated than trying to find the map including all ICE stations (which I couldn't) and then to check for all of those (that would be 4 queries, mine is one). Especially the app version, since this one filters out only the relevant trains. I think my answer adds an alternative that has its merit for specific situations. Also, I don't think your answer to question 2) is too helpful - this is where I concentrate on, since this method easily can be used for example for Hamburg or Munich.

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:21












  • actually 5 queries if you do not know the ICE lines in advance, since you would have to include Ostbahnhof as well

    – Paul Paulsen
    Jan 29 at 10:28
















That's a complicated way. Did you check the link I added to my answer? There you'll get one comprehensive table for each of the 4 possible starting points. These tables include also all connections with a train change (unless you select to not see them).

– asdfex
Jan 28 at 16:15





That's a complicated way. Did you check the link I added to my answer? There you'll get one comprehensive table for each of the 4 possible starting points. These tables include also all connections with a train change (unless you select to not see them).

– asdfex
Jan 28 at 16:15













@asdfex I agree it is complicated, but I do not know any other way that allows you to check for all stations in Berlin. Your link only showed me Berlin Hbf, even when I just typed BERLIN as departure point.

– Paul Paulsen
Jan 29 at 9:58





@asdfex I agree it is complicated, but I do not know any other way that allows you to check for all stations in Berlin. Your link only showed me Berlin Hbf, even when I just typed BERLIN as departure point.

– Paul Paulsen
Jan 29 at 9:58













As i said, you have to do it for each station - you can find them in the map with all ICE services. You can also use the "Kursbuch" that essentially contains three possible Berlin stops (the fourth one you can infer with some knowledge), but is separated into two tables. kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe

– asdfex
Jan 29 at 10:11






As i said, you have to do it for each station - you can find them in the map with all ICE services. You can also use the "Kursbuch" that essentially contains three possible Berlin stops (the fourth one you can infer with some knowledge), but is separated into two tables. kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe

– asdfex
Jan 29 at 10:11














@asdfex Well, I don't think it's more complicated than trying to find the map including all ICE stations (which I couldn't) and then to check for all of those (that would be 4 queries, mine is one). Especially the app version, since this one filters out only the relevant trains. I think my answer adds an alternative that has its merit for specific situations. Also, I don't think your answer to question 2) is too helpful - this is where I concentrate on, since this method easily can be used for example for Hamburg or Munich.

– Paul Paulsen
Jan 29 at 10:21






@asdfex Well, I don't think it's more complicated than trying to find the map including all ICE stations (which I couldn't) and then to check for all of those (that would be 4 queries, mine is one). Especially the app version, since this one filters out only the relevant trains. I think my answer adds an alternative that has its merit for specific situations. Also, I don't think your answer to question 2) is too helpful - this is where I concentrate on, since this method easily can be used for example for Hamburg or Munich.

– Paul Paulsen
Jan 29 at 10:21














actually 5 queries if you do not know the ICE lines in advance, since you would have to include Ostbahnhof as well

– Paul Paulsen
Jan 29 at 10:28





actually 5 queries if you do not know the ICE lines in advance, since you would have to include Ostbahnhof as well

– Paul Paulsen
Jan 29 at 10:28

















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