From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of named passenger trains in Switzerland.
Train Name
|
Railroad
|
Train Endpoints
|
Operated
|
Aare Linth
|
SOB
|
Chur – Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Bern
|
2021–present
|
AB-Klassiker
|
AB
|
Appenzell – Wasserauen
|
present
|
Aqualino[1]
|
RhB
|
Scuol-Tarasp – Chur – Disentis/Muster
|
present
|
Bernina Express
|
RhB
|
Chur – St. Moritz – Tirano
|
present
|
CNL Apus
|
CNL
|
Amsterdam (Centraal) – Bellinzona – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
CNL Aurora
|
CNL
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Copenhagen (Central)
|
present
|
CNL Berliner
|
CNL
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Berlin (Hauptbahnhof)
|
present
|
CNL Canopus
|
CNL
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Prague (Central)
|
present
|
CNL Komet
|
CNL
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Hamburg (Hauptbahnhof)
|
present
|
CNL Orion
|
CNL
|
Basel – Dresden (Hauptbahnhof) – Prague (Main)
|
present
|
CNL Pegasus
|
CNL
|
Amsterdam (Centraal) – Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Brig
|
present
|
CNL Semper
|
CNL
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Dresden (Hauptbahnhof)
|
present
|
EC Borromeo
|
Cisalpino
|
Basel – Bern (Main) – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
EC Canaletto
|
Cisalpino
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Venice (Santa Lucia)
|
present
|
EC Cinque Terre
|
Cisalpino
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – La Spezia
|
present
|
EC Iris
|
SNCB, CFL, SNCF, SBB CFF FFS
|
Brussels (Midi/Zuid) – Strasbourg – Chur
|
present
|
EC Jean Monet
|
SNCB, CFL, SNCF
|
Brussels (Midi/Zuid) – Strasbourg – Basel
|
present
|
EC Kaiserin Elisabeth
|
SBB CFF FFS, ÖBB
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Salzburg
|
present
|
EC Lemano
|
Cisalpino
|
Geneva – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
EC Maria Theresia
|
SBB CFF FFS, ÖBB
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Vienna (Westbahnhof)
|
present
|
EC Monte Rosa
|
Cisalpino
|
Geneva – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
EC Ticino
|
SBB CFF FFS, FS/Trenitalia, Cisalpino
|
Basel – Lucerne – Milan (Central)
|
1993–2008
|
EC Transalpin
|
SBB CFF FFS, ÖBB
|
Basel – Vienna (Westbahnhof)
|
1958–2010
|
EC Vall D’Ossola
|
Cisalpino
|
Basel – Bern (Main) – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
EC Vallese
|
Cisalpino
|
Geneva – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
EC Vauban
|
SNCB, CFL, SNCF, SBB CFF FFS
|
Brussels (Midi/Zuid) – Strasbourg – Brig
|
present
|
EC Verbano
|
Cisalpino
|
Basel – Bern (Main) – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
EN Roma
|
SBB CFF FFS, Trenitalia
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Venice (Santa Lucia) Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Rome (Termini)
|
present
|
EN Wiener Walzer
|
SBB CFF FFS, ÖBB, MÁV
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Prague (Main) Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Vienna (Westbahnhof) – Budapest (Keleti)
|
present
|
EN Zürichsee
|
SBB CFF FFS, ÖBB, SŽ, HŽ, ŽS
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Ljubljana (Main) – Zagreb – Beograd
|
present
|
Engadin Star[2]
|
RhB
|
Landquart – St. Moritz
|
present
|
Glacier Express
|
MGB, RhB
|
Zermatt – St. Moritz
|
present
|
Glarner Sprinter
|
SBB CFF FFS
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Linthal
|
2004–2014
|
GoldenPass Line
|
Zentralbahn, BLS, Montreux–Lenk im Simmental line
|
Lucerne – Interlaken – Zweisimmen – Montreux
|
present
|
Gotthard Panorama Express
|
SBB CFF FFS, SGV
|
(Lucerne by boat to) Flüelen – Bellinzona – Lugano
|
present
|
Heidi Express (currently the Bernina Express)
|
RhB
|
Chur – St. Moritz – Tirano
|
present
|
IC Brianza
|
Cisalpino
|
Bellinzona – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
IC Insubria
|
SBB CFF FFS, Trenitalia
|
Stuttgart (Hauptbahnhof) – Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
IC Mediolanum
|
SBB CFF FFS, Trenitalia
|
Basel – Lucerne – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
IC Monte Ceneri
|
Cisalpino
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
IC Riviera dei Fiori
|
Cisalpino
|
Basel – Lucerne – Genova – Nice
|
present
|
IC Teodolina
|
Cisalpino
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
IC Tiziano
|
SBB CFF FFS, Trenitalia
|
Basel – Lucerne – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
IC Verdi
|
SBB CFF FFS, Trenitalia
|
Basel – Lucerne – Milan (Central)
|
present
|
RE Lötschberg[3]
|
BLS
|
Spiez – Kandersteg – Goppenstein (Lötschental) – Brig
|
present
|
Rheingold
|
|
Basel – Hook of Holland
|
1934–1987
|
Rheintal Express
|
SBB CFF FFS
|
St. Gallen – Chur
|
present
|
TEE Gottardo
|
SBB CFF FFS, FS
|
Zurich – Milan (Central)
|
1961–1988
|
TEE Ticino
|
SBB CFF FFS
|
Zurich – Milan (Central)
|
1961–1974
|
Train des Vignes
|
SBB CFF FFS
|
Vevey – Puidoux-Chexbres
|
present
|
Train du Chocolat[4]
|
TPF
|
Montreux – Gruyères – Broc
|
present
|
Train Fondue
|
TPF
|
(Montreux) – Montbovon – Bulle
|
present
|
Trenhotel Pau Casals
|
Elipsos
|
Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) – Barcelona (Estació de França)
|
present
|
Trenino della Neve
|
RhB
|
St. Moritz – Tirano
|
present
|
Treno Gottardo
|
SOB,
SBB CFF FFS
|
Locarno – Airolo – Göschenen – Arth-Goldau – Zurich (Hauptbahnhof)
Locarno – Airolo – Göschenen – Arth-Goldau – Basel (SBB)
|
2020–present
|
Voralpen Express
|
SOB (until 2013 in collaboration with SBB CFF FFS)
|
Lucerne – Rapperswil – St. Gallen ( – Romanshorn, until 2013)
|
present
|