Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Ticket Métro-Train-RER €2.50 €1.99 Ticket t+ €2.50 Day pass €12 daily cap at €12 The following ticket types are valid to travel to and from CDG and Orly airports Paris Region Airport ticket €13 €13 Paris Visite (1/2/3/5 days) €29.90 to €76.25 Week pass (Monday-Sunday) €31.60 Month pass (calendar month) €88.80 Year pass
The Ticket t+ is a single trip ticket for Paris public transit that was introduced in 2007 and that is valid on buses and on the métro and rail systems within Paris. From 2025, it is only available as a paper ticket at the price of €2.50, [ 1 ] and is being replaced by two new types of single tickets available to be loaded onto a reusable ...
Unlike a ticket t+, users can transfer from the métro/RER to the bus/tram network (or vice versa) within 90 minutes (bus/tram) or 2 hours (Metro/train/RER) without paying a second fare (if transfering to or from the Metro/train/RER systen, it is the tarif of that system, €1.99, that applies). [3]
The RER contains 257 stations, 33 of which are within the city of Paris, and runs over 602 km (374 mi) of track, including 81.5 km (50.6 mi) underground. Each line passes through the city almost wholly underground and on tracks dedicated to the RER, but some city center tracks are shared between line D and line B.
Daily tickets are also available as paper tickets until the end of 2024. Paris Visite is a paper ticket aimed at visitors offering unlimited trips for a duration of one, two, three or five days, for zones 1–3 covering the centre of Paris, or zones 1–5 covering the whole of the network including the RER to the airports, Versailles and ...
RER B is one of the five lines in the Réseau Express Régional (English: Regional Express Network), a hybrid commuter rail and rapid transit system serving Paris, France and its Île-de-France suburbs. The 80-kilometre (50 mi) RER B line crosses the region from north to south, with all trains serving a group of stations in central Paris ...
The pass can be bought for 1, 2, 3 or 5 consecutive days for public transport zones 1-3 or 1-5 (includes airport transport). [1] [2] [3]Once purchased, it allows free travel on the Paris Métro, RER and Transilien trains (within the chosen fare zones), Buses (both the RATP bus network, which covers Paris and its near suburbs, and the Optile network, which covers the wider Grande couronne area ...
The Paris suburban rail services represents alone 82% of the French rail annual ridership. [1] [2] With a total of 100.2 billion passenger-kilometres, [1] [2] France has the fifth-most used passenger network worldwide, and second-most used in Europe after that of Russia. [8] France is a member of the International Union of Railways (UIC).