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Redbus2germany

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Redbus2Germany
Redbus2germany

Redbus2 Germany provides a one-stop guide for expats to move and quickly settle down in Germany. We provide content for exclusive, modern, and readily available German services to foreigners so that they can conveniently make better decisions.

Red Bus 2 Germany provides ultimate content and information to guide expats to move and quickly settle down in Germany. We provide content for exclusive, modern, and readily available German services so foreigners can make choices according to their convenience. We want our audience to feel at home, secure, and knowledgeable about life in Germany.

You can check our forum section and search for the topics to have answers to all your questions.

If you still have questions, please feel free to ask us via the Contact Us page, and we will get back to you as soon as possible.

You can be a part of our community by joining people living in Germany and be a part of any specific group by join our groups. If you feel like having a new group, contact us. We’ll happily serve you with your queries.

When we talk about public transport in Germany, there are two aspects of it; one is using public transport to travel between different cities, states or even countries, in this category you have long-distance buses, long-distance trains like IC, ICE, EC or regional trains, and the other category is within a city or nearby suburb travel, for which you use trams, local buses or subways or metro or as they are called S-Bahn or U-Bahn.

In this article, we will talk about the first category, train travel or long-distance travel. We will be covering local transport in the second part of this article. In part 3 of this series, we will also cover what other options of travel you have apart from those mentioned above There are many options available whenever it comes to public transport in Germany. The country has an effective nationalized railway network. You need to buy a ticket from Deutsche Bahn to cross the country by train.

Public transports in Germany are safe, efficient, and easy to use. With this smooth facility, German cities are not part of being a car-loving nation anymore. In Berlin, only 30% of trips are by car, and in Munich, there are 33% of the trips. On an average day, 30 million passengers use public transport in Germany.


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Urban r Tickets and Costs in Germany


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