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Hi Yav0520 and welcome to MySwissAlps!
Yes, the Bernina Express is covered by the Swiss Travel Pass (even in the small portion around Tirano in Italy). Reservations are extra and open 90 days before departure (no seats are allocated for Swiss Travel Pass holders)
Once you can make reservations, you can do so with one of the companies we recommend here: http://www.myswissalps.com/be rninaexpress/packages
The Swiss Travel Pass can be bought now if you wish and can be done online (giving you an electronic back up to print out again in case you lose it on your travels (and no need to wait in line at a rail office in Tirano to buy it). http://www.myswissalps.com/sw isstravelpass/price
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1) reservations and worries about getting the train
To travel Tirano – Zurich, you do not have to travel on the Bernina Express (which only runs Tirano – Chur) There are regular trains on the route as well, although you would have to make a couple of changes of train. As such you are rarely likely to get stuck
For example:
Bernina Express: Tirano depart 14.25 – Chur arrive 18.19
Alternative by regional train: Tirano depart 13.41, change at Pontresina and Samedan – arrive Chur 18.03
Note also that only Tirano – Samedan is the actual Bernina railway. The rest of the route to Chur is the Albula railway, and Chur to Zurich is a Swiss Federal Railways inter-city line.
2) country borders
In most cases in Europe, international railway crossing points are not governed by the actual border but by which country runs the trains across the border. In Tirano the railway into Tirano is Swiss owned and operated and therefore the rail pass is valid.
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Dear Lucas, thank you for your info. Will take note of it.
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Dear 1960man. Thank you for your info as well. I’m rather confused though. what’s the difference on Tirano – samedan railway, albula railway. Do the trains take different routes? If so, which route has got nicer sceneries?
15484 posts
Hi Yavo520,
There’s only one route, you can find details here: http://www.myswissalps.com/be rninaexpress/gettingth ere. 1960man means that half of the route to Chur is called Bernina line and the other half Albula line. That’s only names, the Bernina Express gets you all the way to Chur with great scenery 95% of the way. Then you’ll change to a “regular” train to Zurich.
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Dear Arno, Thank you for your clarification. By the way, do I have to make seat reservation for regular train or is it free sitting?
72625 posts
Hi Yavo,
Regular Swiss trains don’t require seat reservations, though they are optional on some routes. I wouldn’t usually make them myself.
http://www.myswissalps.com/tr ain/reservations
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Dear Lucas, Thank you very much your info and the links attached. I’ll purchase the Swiss Pass in advance and do my my seat reservations on Bernina Express when the time comes.
8889 posts
Hi Yav,
You can make BEX reservations (from 90 days out from your travel date) without having first purchased the Swiss Travel Pass.
72625 posts
It is important to understand the difference between the ‘Bernina Express‘ and the ‘Bernina line‘. The Bernina line (railway) is the (originally independent) railway line between St Moritz and Tirano – it became part of the Rhaetian Railway (RhB) in 1943. It has regular ‘normal’ train services.
http://www.fahrplanfelder.ch/ fileadmin/fap_pdf_fiel ds/2019/950.pdf
The Bernina Express runs through once a day between Tirano and Chur, but the line from Samedan/Pontresina/St Moritz to Chur is the Albula line not the Bernina line.
Both lines form part of the Rhaetian Railway (RhB) network of narrow gauge lines
Rhaetian Railway network map:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Rhaetian_Railway#/medi a/File:MapRhaetischeBa hn.svg
Albula railway line:
http://www.fahrplanfelder.ch/ fileadmin/fap_pdf_fiel ds/2019/950.pdf
Bernina railway line:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Bernina_railway