🗺️European Train Corridor Hubs
Corridor hubs sit between thin route templates and long blog guides: one page per money intent, with links to /routes/ booking pages, operators, stations, and flagship articles.
🔥Top money corridors
- Paris–London — Eurostar, ~2h 17m
- London–Amsterdam — direct Eurostar
- Paris–Amsterdam — Eurostar (ex-Thalys) ~3h 20m
- Berlin–Munich — ICE ~4h
- Rome–Milan — Frecciarossa ~3h
- London–Brussels — Eurostar ~2h
- Paris–Lyon — TGV ~2h
- Barcelona–Paris — AVE/TGV ~6.5–7.5h
- Zurich–Milan — Gotthard EC ~3h 20m
- Amsterdam–Berlin — ICE ~6h
- Madrid–Barcelona — AVE ~2h 30m
- Vienna–Paris Nightjet — overnight
📚Cluster indexes
Search live times & tickets
Compare schedules and book via All Aboard on EuroRail Times.
Search Paris → London →FAQ
What is a corridor hub?
A single SEO page focused on one high-intent city pair or overnight, linking to the live /routes/ booking page and related guides.
Where do I buy tickets?
Use the Search button or open the linked route page — checkout continues via All Aboard on EuroRail Times.
Are these different from blog posts?
Yes. Blogs go deep; corridor hubs are the canonical money URL for the city-pair query and stay shorter and more actionable.
Book these routes
Long-tail routes (crawl assist)
Supporting booking pages linked from this hub so crawl budget can reach live route inventory — not a thin-page rewrite.