International TravelRail Travel

International Rail Borders in the Netherlands

The Netherlands has a number of rail tracks that cross international borders into either Germany or Belgium.

In this article we overview all cross-border rail services currently operating including the less known local stopping services. This could be useful for those with rail passes such as the Interrail ticket who wish to use local/regional trains.

How To Book Rail Tickets: You can check timetables, prices and make bookings for some of the international train services listed below at the NS International site

ns international websiteYou can also purchase an InterRail Pass here

trainline logoInternational train tickets in the Netherlands can also be booked at the Trainline site. It offers a wide range of payment options in multiple currencies (including EUR/USD/GBP/AUD). There is a small booking fee but the tickets are fully exchangeable and refundable right up to the day before travel.

Dutch rail network: international connections map

On the following map (source: NS) we have highlighted all 9 international rail border crossing points in the Netherlands. There are 3 passenger train tracks that go from the Netherlands into Belgium; the remaining 6 tracks cross the Dutch-German border.

international rail borders netherlands
NS (Dutch Railways) network map with border crossings

1. Roosendaal-Essen border

This is the standard rail line linking Roosendaal and Antwerp. It is used by the hourly NMBS/SNCB (Belgian Rail) stopping train service from Roosendaal to Puurs. The train runs via the Belgian border town of Essen. The journey to Antwerpen Centraal takes around 49 minutes. It also stops at Antwerpen Berchem station.

roosendaal-antwerp stop train
Antwerp-bound Belgian Rail stop train at Roosendaal

2. Dutch-Belgian High Speed Line (HSL) border

The HSL Zuid/HSL4 high speed line runs Schiphol Airport-Rotterdam-Antwerp with a branch to Breda. It crosses the border east of the standard Roosendaal-Essen track. The line is served by Eurostar and Intercity Brussels trains on the Amsterdam-Brussels/Paris/London routes. The first station on the Belgian side is Noorderkempen.

eurostar formerly thalys train at rotterdam central
Eurostar (former Thalys) train at Rotterdam Central

3. Maastricht-Visé border

NMBS/SNCB runs a stopping train service between Maastricht and Liège-Guillemins (known as Luik in Dutch). The border stations are Eijsden (NL) and Visé (BE). The service runs hourly and takes 33 minutes. Sometimes the train can go on to Hasselt (BE).

maastricht liege train
NMBS/SNCB stopping train Maastricht-Liège

The spectacular Liège-Guillemins station opened in 2009 and has a 160m long monumental arch which is 32m high, housing 5 platforms. For more see our Amsterdam-Liège travel page.

4. Heerlen-Herzogenrath border

From Heerlen runs an hourly Arriva stopping train to the German city of Aachen. The train runs via Landgraaf and Eygelshoven Markt on the Dutch side. It stops at the German border town of Herzogenrath before terminating at Aachen Hbf. The Heerlen-Aachen journey takes 24 minutes.

arriva train heerlen aachen
Arriva train service to Aachen

5. Venlo-Kaldenkirchen border

Venlo is a city in the south of the Netherlands close to the German border. There is a stop train service (RE13 operated by EuroBahn) which runs hourly to the city of Hamm in the North Rhine-Westphalia region. This 160km trip takes almost 2 hours 30 minutes and is known as the Maas-Wupper Express.

The first German border station is Kaldenkirchen and the train makes stops (amongst others) in Mönchengladbach Hbf, Neuss Hbf, Düsseldorf Hbf (1 hour 4 minutes), Wuppertal Hbf and Hagen Hbf.

6. Arnhem-Emmerich border

Emmerich is a German border town connected by rail to Arnhem. This track is used by the high speed ICE International service between Amsterdam and Frankfurt which makes stops at Utrecht, Arnhem Centraal, Oberhausen Hbf, Duisburg Hbf, Düsseldorf Hbf, Köln Hbf and Frankfurt airport.

There is a VIAS-branded (RE-19) Arnhem-Düsseldorf train service which stops at the Dutch border station of Zenvenaar and reaches Emmerich in 22 minutes. The total journey time is 1 hour 48 minutes and the train makes a number of stops including Empel-Rees, Wesel, Oberhausen Hbf, Duisburg Hbf and Düsseldorf Airport before terminating at Düsseldorf Hbf.

arnhem dusseldorf train abelio
Dusseldorf-bound train (VIAS) at Arnhem Centraal station

7. Enschede-Gronau border

From the eastern Dutch city of Enschede runs an hourly DB (German Rail) service to Münster Hbf, a journey which takes around 1 hour 12 minutes. The border stations are Glanerbrug (NL) and Gronau (DE).

There is also an hourly DB service between Enschede and Dortmund (2 hour trip).

db train at enschede station
DB train at Enschede station

8. Hengelo-Bad Bentheim border

There is an hourly rail service (RB-61) run by Keolis-Eurobahn between the eastern Dutch city of Hengelo and Bielefeld Hbf in Germany, a 145km journey which takes 2 hours 14 minutes in total. The train stops at Oldenzaal (Dutch border side) and Bad Bentheim (German border town, after 18 minutes). It continues as a stopping service to Bielefeld and includes stops at Rheine, Osnabrück Hbf and Bünde.

The Bad Bentheim border is also used by the Amsterdam-Berlin Intercity (IC) 5-6x daily service. For further info see our guide international trains to/from Amsterdam

9. Groningen-Weener border

Groningen is a major city in the north-east of the Netherlands. From there you can take an hourly Arriva stop train service to the German border town of Weener (Ostfriesland). The trip takes just under 1 hour and the Dutch border stop is Bad Nieuweschans. Note, the rail track between Bad Nieuweschans and Weener is closed for maintenance until December 2024 – a replacement bus service is running.

This article was originally published in 2013 and has continuously been updated. Last update 15 April 2024.

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