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MAP: Where high-speed trains can take you in France

With approaching 3,000 kilometres of high-speed line, France has the second-longest high-speed rail network in Europe - here's where you can go by high-speed TGV trains.

MAP: Where high-speed trains can take you in France
(Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / AFP)

The fastest lines connect some 200 cities across France and more routes being improved or under construction – and that’s before we get onto the international connections. 

France has the fourth biggest high-speed rail network in the world and the second biggest in Europe (behind Spain).

READ ALSO VIDEO: France unveils its next-generation high-speed TGV trains

France’s state-run rail operator SNCF operates two types of the high-speed TGV trains: the TGV InOui, and the low-cost option, Ouigo. Both of these run on the high-speed lines and connect cities and bigger towns, but the cheaper Ouigo trains are slightly more basic, with less storage space and no buffet car or onboard wifi.

Meanwhile competitors from other European rail operators also offer services within and out of French borders to 30 European cities including London, Turin, Brussels, Geneva and many more.

Trains on the high-speed network will take you between France’s major cities in just a few hours, travelling at speeds of up to 320km/h. 

Paris to Marseille, for example, takes just three hours to travel 770km; while travellers can reach Lyon (460km), Nantes (381km) or Bordeaux (581km) from the capital in about two hours.

READ ALSO Yes, train travel across Europe is far better than flying – even with kids

That means it compares favourably to high-speed rail in the UK, for example where the fastest train from London to Aberdeen – roughly the same distance as Paris to Bordeaux – will take over seven hours, and will often cost a lot more.

You can find a full list of all the routes on this network on the SNCF Connect website.

The first French high-speed railway, the LGV Sud-Est, opened in 1981. It was also Europe’s first high-speed rail line, and linked Paris and Lyon.

While you can zip easily between Paris and the Atlantic coast, or the Mediterranean, or down the eastern side of the country to the ski resorts in the Alps, a large part of the country remains unconnected to the high-speed network, as the map shows.

You can also download the higher resolution pdf version here

Image: SNCF Connect

Services – especially international services – tend to be focused on Paris, which means that the rail network is often more practical for those in the capital to use.

Beyond TGVs – and less well known – France’s Intercités services run on the country’s main rail lines. They are slower, travelling at a top speed of 160km/h to some 135 destinations the length and breadth of the country. But if you’re in less of a rush, they may be worth your while.

Image: SNCF Intercites

The daytime Intercités network has seven lines:

Paris – Clermont-Ferrand

Paris – Orléans – Limoges  – Toulouse 

Bordeaux – Toulouse – Marseille

Béziers – Clermont-Ferrand

Nantes – Bordeaux

Nantes – Lyon

Toulouse – Hendaye

Departing from Paris-Austerlitz, overnight Intercités take the gentle route to Toulouse, Rodez, Latour-de-Carol, Cerbère, Lourdes, Briançon and Nice. A service to Aurillac is expected to start in December 2023.

READ ALSO 8 French night trains to take this summer

Tickets start at €15 one-way, with prices depending on departure dates. Nevertheless, Intercités tickets generally cost less than TGVs, not least because they are partly subsidised by the State. 

READ ALSO How to save money travelling by train in France

Regional trains, meanwhile, take up the slack of shorter local travel, including daily commutes.

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STRIKES

French motorway staff on strike for first holiday weekend of summer

Workers involved in highway péage operation and intervention have called a strike action over the first weekend of the school holidays.

French motorway staff on strike for first holiday weekend of summer

The CFDT union called on workers on the Autoroutes du Sud (ASF) and Vinci motorway networks to strike from 5pm on Friday until 10pm on Sunday evening on the first weekend of France’s ‘grandes vacances’, when thousands of families are due to set off on holiday, according to France Bleu Vaucluse.

READ ALSO Les Grandes Vacances: France’s 2024 summer holidays

The CFDT has filed a strike notice to “demand systematic recruitment in all sectors, with a particular focus on the toll sector” Fabrice Bergery, union representative of the CFDT ASF, said.

The union said staff who leave ASF employment are not being replaced, with employee levels dropping from 1,300 to 700 in recent years. It has demanded the immediate hiring of seasonal workers to ease pressure on current staff, and for permanent contracts to be advertised whenever staff members leave the company.

“With excessive automation, management does not consider it useful to replace those who retire. Everything is done remotely, intervention times have become much longer to assist the customer or repair equipment,” assures Fabrice Bergery.

And it has condemned a reorganisation of toll services on France’s autoroutes, as jobs across the three Vinci-owned networks are consolidated and centralised. 

The CGT union, meanwhile, has filed a strike notice, extending over the entire summer season, to September 15th.

ASF manages some 2,700 kilometres of France’s autoroutes in the south of the country, including the busy A7 and A9. 

For the most part, motorists will probably not notice any problems as toll booths are automatic. However, unions warned that there may be delays – leading to queues – in case of technical problems with the automated systems.

READ ALSO Travel trouble in store for France on first big summer holiday weekend

Vinci, however, has promised that ‘continuity of service will be ensured across the entire motorway network’.

The ASF manages some 2,700 kilometres of autoroutes in the south of the country, including the busy A7 and A9. Vinci Autoroutes, meanwhile, operates more than 4,400 kilometres of motorways in the west, south-west and south-east of France.

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