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TRANSPORT

Revealed: Germany’s most expensive (and cheapest) cities for public transport

You won’t believe which city in Germany has the cheapest monthly public transport tickets, according to a new study.

Revealed: Germany's most expensive (and cheapest) cities for public transport
Passengers waiting for the S-Bahn in Munich. Photo: DPA

The cost of travelling by bus, tram or on the underground varies hugely depending on where you are in Germany.

A new study by the General German Automobile Club (ADAC) spotlights the differences after it compared how much tickets cost in 21 cities.

READ ALSO: Why this German city plans to make public transport free

Here are the surprising results.

Monthly tickets for adults (Monatskarte Erwachsene)

The cost of renting or buying a flat in Munich may be the highest in the country,  but the Bavarian city offers the cheapest tickets for public transport. According to ADAC research, adults pay just €55.20 for a monthly ticket covering the city area.

Compare that to Hamburg in northern Germany where it's almost double the price. Adults have to shell out €109.20 for a monthly ticket. Next most expensive is Cologne and Bonn (both €98.50), followed by Frankfurt (€90.40). Berlin follows, with a monthly ticket costing €81.

At the other end of the scale, Dresden in Saxony is also reasonable, with monthly travel costing €61.50. In Hanover, it costs €63 for a monthly pass.

The average cost for monthly tickets across the entire country is €77.50.

The price differences for an adult monthly ticket are shown in the table below.

Table: ADAC

Weekly tickets for adults (Wochenkarte Erwachsene)

There were also major differences in the price of weekly tickets. Munich again charges the lowest amount with a ticket costing €15.40. In Berlin, passengers have to dig much deeper into their pockets. They pay almost 95 percent more for the weekly ticket, which transport providers charge €30 for in the capital.

READ ALSO: How travelling by train in Germany is set to improve

Day tickets for adults (Tageskarte Erwachsene)

For adult day tickets, the difference between the most expensive and the cheapest provider is 70 percent, according to ADAC research. Stuttgart in the south-west charges €5.20, while in Cologne and Bonn, in North Rhine-Westphalia, the day ticket costs €8.80.

The average cost across the country is €7.02.

With the day pass, adults can travel as often as they like during a certain period of time (usually around the 24-hour mark) with all public transport.

The table below compares the price differences for the day tickets for adults in different cities.

Table: ADAC

Single tickets for adults (Einzelfahrt Erwachsene)

The cheapest single ticket for adults can be bought in Mannheim for €1.80. In Nuremberg, passengers pay almost 80 percent more for the same ticket: €3.20. The average for all cities was €2.74.

Short journey tickets for adults (Kurzstrecke Erwachsene)

The cities also charge very different prices for shorter journeys. While adults in Stuttgart can buy a Kurzstreke for €1.40, the same ticket in Bonn and Cologne costs €2 – 40 percent more expensive. The average cost in all cities from the study is €1.70. However, this excludes Dresden, which does not offer the short journey option as an individual ticket.

The ADAC price comparison table below shows where the highest and lowest prices are according to the different tickets available in Germany.

eTariff tickets

So-called eTariffs are in place in Karlsruhe and Mannheim. They allow users to pay online for the distance they travel as the crow flies rather than fixed prices. A basic price of €1 is charged in Karlsruhe and 0.80 cents in Mannheim. Then it costs 25 cents per kilometre in Karlsruhe and 20 cents per kilometre in Mannheim on top of the basic price.

Single tickets for children (Einzelfahrt Kinder)

There isn't huge differences in the cost of single trips for children. At €1.20, tickets are cheapest in Leipzig, with the most expensive (€1.70) in Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Düsseldorf, Essen, Wuppertal and Berlin.

Single trips for children cost €1.53 on average across Germany.

Children under the age of six travel free of charge in all cities, however youngsters in Dresden and Leipzig have to pay for travel when they start school (even if they are younger than six-years-old).

Taking a bike on public transport

In the transport associations that cover Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Düsseldorf, Essen and Wuppertal, customers have to pay €3.60 extra for every bike they take on board with them.

On average, transport associations across the country charge €2.25 for this service. In Frankfurt, Hamburg and Hanover bicycle transport is free of charge. But beware: there is no guarantee that you will be allowed to take your bike on board with you if the train is full.

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TRANSPORT

Copenhagen Metro lines reopen after two-week closure

Lines M3 and M4 of the Copenhagen Metro are back in service having reopened on Sunday, one day ahead of schedule.

Copenhagen Metro lines reopen after two-week closure

The two lines had been closed so that the Metro can run test operations before opening five new stations on the M4 line this summer.

The tests, which began on February 10th, are now done and the lines were running again as of Sunday evening, a day ahead of the original planned reopening on Monday February 26th.

“We are very pleased to be able to welcome our passengers on to our two lines M3 and M4,” head of operations with the Metro Søren Boysen said.

“The whole test procedure exceeded all expectations and went faster than expected and we can therefore get a head start on our reopening now,” he said.

Time set aside for potential repeat tests was not needed in the event, allowing the test closures to be completed ahead of time.

“Several of our many tests went better than expected and we have therefore not used all the time we needed for extra tests,” Boysen said.

The two lines serve around one million passengers every week, according to the Metro company.

READ ALSO: Copenhagen city government greenlights extension to Metro line

The new stops on the M4 line will be located south of central Copenhagen in the Valby and Sydhavn areas. The will have the names Haveholmen, Enghave Brygge, Sluseholmen, Mozarts Plads and København Syd (Copenhagen South).

The M3 and M4 lines, the newer sections of the Metro, opened in 2019 and 2020 respectively.

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