Dutch_railway_services

Dutch railway services

Dutch railway services

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Dutch railway services is an index page of all the rail services operated in the Netherlands.

Schematic of the 2018 ProRail timetable

Railway services in the Netherlands are operated by the following (see also rail transport operators in the Netherlands):

In the Netherlands there are three types of domestic train services on the main lines, these are:

  • Intercity Direct - Domestic Intercity Service which runs along the high speed line (up to 200 km/h).
  • Intercity - An express, limited-stop service, often calling only at major railway stations; in some cases it has stops at all stations along part of the route.
  • Sprinter - A local service usually calling at all stations along the route, operated mostly by Flirt, Sprinter Next Generation or SLT stock.

Private operators running on regional lines use other brands:

  • Sneltrein - A semi-fast service, trains skip minor stations along the route.
  • Stoptrein - A service with stops at all stations along the route.

The 'Sneltrein' and 'Stoptrein' services used to be operated on the main lines as well. Since 2007 both services were being phased out. As of December 2011, all 'Sneltrein' services on the main lines had been replaced by either 'Intercity' services or 'Sprinter' services. Meanwhile, all 'Stoptrein' services on the main lines had been rebranded into 'Sprinter' services.

International (high speed) services to countries such as Belgium, France and Germany are mostly operated by NS International and Thalys, although other operators have international services as well, such as Deutsche Bahn and Belgian Railway services.

Below the train services are arranged by type, and for each type ordered by number. For a combined sortable table with links to timetables, but listing less stations, see Train routes in the Netherlands.

Services

More information Series, Operator ...

See also

Notes

  1. locomotives are changed at Bad Bentheim
  2. On NS operated stations and their timetables, the trains are listed as Stoptrein. The Belgian operator NMBS uses the name IC for the train type on their stations, timetables and the train itself, even though the train calls at all intermediate stations. As such you may find the train announced at Maastricht as a Stoptrein, while boards on the train say it's an IC train

References

  1. "Valleilijn" (PDF). Valleilijn.[permanent dead link]
  2. "Connexxion GTW". Archived from the original on 2013-12-02. Retrieved 2013-06-10.

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