By Christopher F Schuetze
Bärbel Hell, who does not usually ride on trains, was delighted to discover that the lumbering blue-and-white regional she had boarded one early afternoon was not too packed.
Even though it was summer, and even though the line she was on connects Germany’s second largest city, Hamburg, with the country’s most exclusive resort destination, the island of Sylt, the coach was not overcrowded.
“It was easy — we found these seats right away,” she said.
Hell, returning home from a July shopping trip to Hamburg with friends, had been bracing for much worse — not only because of vacation season, but also because of a special pricing programme from Germany’s national rail service that many here had been sceptical of.
Through the end of August, in a bid to help offset the inflationary pressures on so many of life’s other essential items, especially energy, the government is subsidising all-you-can-ride monthly rail tickets for only 9 euros, or about $9.30.
“I think it helps a lot,” said Hell, 67, a retiree. “It gives people the chance to get away — because who can afford that with gas prices these days?”
For all of the appeal of the low price, many German train regulars, who have long had to deal with delayed or cancelled trips and overcrowded cars, were dreading the expected effect of the promotion.
While it promised to make train travel much more affordable — putting hundreds of euros back in the pockets of regular commuters — it also loomed as a burden that could break a system already at its limit.
Before the tickets were even valid, the country’s tabloids were predicting “9 euro chaos” in their headlines. But the result so far, 10 weeks into the experiment, has been something in rare supply in recent days: a mildly pleasant surprise.
Despite the fact that about a full quarter of Germany’s population bought tickets during the first month of the promotion, the passenger surge has turned out to be less problematic than many anticipated.
Instead, the offer, despite an occasional overcrowded train, has become popular. A recent poll conducted for Der Spiegel, a German newsmagazine, found 55% of all Germans in favour of extending the programme, with 34% against.
“This is one of the greatest things that Germany has thought about in recent years — I would almost say decades,” Felix Lobrecht, a well-known German comic and social observer, who by his own admission prefers his Mercedes to trains, said on a recent podcast.
Still, regulars on the train from Hamburg to Westerland, the main town on Sylt, were not ready to declare the plan an unqualified success, nor were they in a mood to forgive some of the past transgressions of Germany’s train network. “You saw a definite increase in travellers,” Matthias Carstensen, 27, said on his way to his job at the only McDonald’s on Sylt, which sits in the North Sea about 4 miles off the mainland, to which it is connected by a rail causeway.
But Carstensen, who has been commuting to work at various jobs on the island for a decade, said the bigger problem was the many delays that had plagued the system even before the introduction of the ticket. “Recently, it’s been really bad,” he said.
Over the past couple of years, the number of trains that have arrived on time has plummeted. While it was nearly 90% in 2020, now fewer than two-thirds of the trains pull into stations on time. The number of trains that are cancelled altogether has increased, too.
The biggest shares of the blame lie with aging infrastructure and rising demand. Even before the summer promotion, the 3,000 kilometres, or more than 1,860 miles, of tracks most used by passenger trains were running at 125% capacity.
The 9 euro ticket — courtesy of a 2.5 billion euro federal subsidy — was meant as a response to sharply rising energy costs caused in part by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But despite its temporary nature, the ticket promotion has become part of a larger discussion about how to make German society more sustainable and less dependent on Russian oil, through policies including encouraging the use of public transportation. “It’s the first, and maybe only, measure in this energy crisis that has been categorically accepted,” said Luisa Neubauer, one of Germany’s best-known climate activists, noting that the measure helps people from different socioeconomic backgrounds more equitably than subsidies on gas or heating do. “It’s been a huge success.”
Modern German passenger trains generally belong to one of two service tiers.
The high-speed network that the country started expanding in the 1990s connects major cities that, by German standards, are far apart. Travellers can pay as much as an airline ticket for the service, but perks include an onboard restaurant, recliner seats and Internet. When these trains deliver as promised, they can make the trip from Berlin to Munich — about the same distance as New York to Montreal — in under four hours.
The workhorses of Germany’s rail system, however, are the more bare-bones regional trains.
Like the six-car Sylt-bound train rambling amid the flat wheat fields and wind turbines at a maximum speed of 60 mph, they cover routes of up to several hundred miles, connecting neighbouring cities or urban zones with their surrounding suburbs. These are the trains that — together with urban public transportation — can be used anywhere at any time for 9 euros a month this summer. (A traveller willing to make a number of connections, and endure a large number of stops, could cross the entire country on the 9 euro ticket.)
Pamela Seelbach, 38, who was having one last cigarette before boarding the train in Hamburg for the three-hour trip to Sylt, said she saved about 80 euros a month with the ticket just on everyday trips in and out of the city. The money, she said, made a big difference in her four-member family’s budget.
But what Seelbach has most enjoyed about the new ticket, she said, is the fact that her entire family can now take an out-of-town day trip. “It’s something that we would not ordinarily do,” she said.
Olaf Bösch, a native of Sylt, said that while he was against the low ticket price in general — “It’s just too cheap — it’s practically free,” he said — he had experienced an unexpected benefit. Like most employers on Sylt, Bösch pays the train costs for workers as a perk. So the three-month programme has cut his costs.
At least one group of train employees, conductors, has identified a real benefit from the promotion. Because it is now so rare for somebody to use the train without paying, many conductors have stopped checking for tickets.
“We don’t have to deal with fare dodgers anymore,” said one conductor on the Hamburg-Westerland line, who asked not to be identified because he was not allowed to speak to the news media. “Apparently everyone has 9 euros to spare.”