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I review Europe’s last great sleeper train, from Stockholm to Kiruna in Lapland

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Happy Easter!  As today will be a quiet day on the site I thought I would share a few highlights from our 15 hour train ride last week from Stockholm to Kiruna in (Swedish) Lapland.

Just before we set off I saw a magazine article which called this the greatest sleeper train trip in Europe.  If that is the case, it is more a case of ‘last man standing’ than anything else.

How you feel about sleeper trains will depend on your age.  If you are 40+ then you probably have some experience of taking sleeper trains around Europe.  I still have vivid memories of travelling to Berlin and Prague like this – waking up to find myself in Berlin in 1990, in the middle of a snowfall, when the wall had just come down, was a magical experience.

Those days have gone.  Deutsche Bahn was the biggest operator and it stopped its sleeper services in 2016.  Austrian Railways picked up some of the slack, buying and refurbishing some of the DB rolling stock, but the budget airlines had already changed the market for ever.

I am guessing that most HfP readers under 30 have never seen, yet alone been on, a European sleeper train.  They are probably struggling to think of a good reason why they would want to share a compartment with five strangers for the night for the same, or more, money as a flight.

Click on any of the pictures to enlarge slightly.

Review Stockholm to Kiruna Narvik Lapland sleeper train

Let’s start with the facts.  The Lapland train leaves Stockholm Central at 18.10 and arrives in Kiruna at 09.24.  It carries on to Narvik in Norway.

We chose to fly to Stockholm the night before, getting the evening BA flight and then the Arlanda Express train into the centre.  This was my first experience of the ‘longer route’ Club Europe catering since it was redesigned and I was genuinely impressed – well done BA.

We stayed at the Radisson Blu Royal Viking which is attached to Central Station, but which has very small rooms.  The state of the ‘refurbished’ Business Rooms make me worry how bad the unrefurbished standard rooms would be.  Instead, I recommend the brand new Scandic Continental next door which is where we stayed when we returned to Stockholm five days later, cancelling a 2nd Royal Viking reservation.  I will do an article on the Scandic Friends loyalty scheme in a few days.

Review Stockholm to Kiruna Narvik Lapland sleeper train

Next day, we left our luggage at the Royal Viking and went off exploring in Stockholm.  Early evening we collected our cases and did the 10 second walk back into the station.

Review Stockholm to Kiruna Narvik Lapland sleeper train

Cabins are 6-berth but anyone booking four or more seats gets a private compartment.  We paid 3,445 SEK (£295) for the four of us.  Bedding is provided but no food, except for six cartons of water.

Max Burgess and Molly Burgess

Let me explain how this works.  The two top beds can be seen in the top picture.  The back of the seats flips up, creating the middle bed.  This leaves the base of the seating to provide the lower bed.

A ladder is available if you use the top bunk, which we didn’t.  There are straps to secure the occupant of the middle bunk:

Molly Burgess

This reminded me, 100%, of the sleeper trains I used in the early 1990’s.  And not in a good way.  The rolling stock did not seem 30 years old but nothing has changed in terms of design.  My wife and I each managed about three hours sleep at best, although the kids were out like a light.

Review Stockholm to Kiruna Narvik Lapland sleeper train

Food is via the restaurant car.  Oddly, this was swapped over during the night.  Totally swapped over – the old restaurant car was removed and a replacement, with a different layout, installed in its place!  This was a bit of a surprise in the morning.

The food offering was very average indeed.  The photo below makes the selection look better than it was.  The buffet and the train as a whole was not ‘English friendly’ – even the leaflet in the cabin was entirely in Swedish apart from a line saying ‘Ask the crew if you speak English and need to know anything’.  This is very unusual for Sweden.

Review Stockholm to Kiruna Narvik Lapland sleeper train

Here’s the seating in the 2nd (morning) restaurant car:

Review Stockholm to Kiruna Narvik Lapland sleeper train

Whilst 15 hours is a very long time to spend on the train, especially when you only manage about three hours sleep, it passed fairly quickly.  This was mainly because the kids did go to sleep so we had to turn the lights out and couldn’t do much except lay down and wonder why we couldn’t sleep ….

It was a shame that London had been unusually cold and snowy in the previous weeks.  When we planned this it was on the basis that the kids would like to experience winter …. but we’d all had enough of that in London!

I’m not going to review our hotel in Kiruna, Camp Ripan, but do let me know if you have any specific questions.  You are substantially north of the Arctic Circle here and it is a base for anyone looking for a wide range of winter activities.

What you don’t see from the pictures is that it is very much on the edge of the town – not remote – and overlooked by five very high apartment blocks!  On the upside, it means you can walk into Kiruna’s town centre in 10 minutes.

Review Stockholm to Kiruna Narvik Lapland sleeper train

This was our ‘hut’ as we called it (memories of Auf Wiedersehen Pet!) which was about £200 per night including breakfast.  It slept four with bunk beds in a separate bedroom for the kids.  Food, except breakfast, was unbelievably good – you really don’t expect high end cuisine at a place like this.

Lots of outdoor activities can be booked – we did husky sleigh riding on a frozen late (short video on our Instagram channel) and snow shoe walking.  I wrote about our visit to the Icehotel here.

Review Stockholm to Kiruna Narvik Lapland sleeper train

Having left the arrangements for this trip to my wife, I knew nothing about Kiruna.  It is a fascinating place.  The biggest underground iron ore mine in the world is in Kiruna and tours are available.  It dominates the town.

More importantly, it is destroying the town.  Much of the centre is collapsing and most of it is being moved 3km down the road.  The first buildings of the new city are starting to emerge.  Historic buildings will be lifted up and moved and large chunks of housing will be demolished.  Camp Ripan is safe but it, and the adjacent housing blocks, will be 3km and not 300m from the high street in 15 years.

Review Stockholm to Kiruna Narvik Lapland sleeper train

After four nights at Camp Ripan we headed back to Stockholm ….. by plane.  Kiruna has its own airport with a grand total of three flights per day, served by SAS and, in season, Norwegian.

The Norwegian one-way flight back was the same price as the train up, but took 13 hours less.   Norwegian did a decent job – brand new Boeing 737-8, what felt like decent leg room, comfortable (for 80 minutes) Recaro slimline seating, cheap (by Swedish standards) food and drink and the new design ‘extra deep’ luggage bins which worked well.  No luxury but no complaints.

Comments (95)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Mycity says:

    Nice try, the posters name gives it away!

  • HAM76 says:

    I don‘t get either why I would ever want to stay with five strangers in a small room and use a public shower… I’m not staying in hostels either. That‘s why I‘m booked into a Deluxe Single next week. Roughly same price as taking an evening flight and staying in a hotel for one night in Munich.

    • callum says:

      That’s probably why they didn’t design this train service specifically for you?

      • HAM76 says:

        Not sure what you read in my previous message and what you are trying to say.

    • RussellH says:

      The reason is price, quite simply. To reserve a couchette is not much more expensive than reserving a seat in many countries.

      It is not a ‘small room’, it is a compartment – six seats dring the day, six bunks by night.

      Possible reason for confusion: we never had couchettes in the UK, because our loading gauge is too small to fit three bunks one above the other, so people’s UK experience of night trains is either seats or sleepers, without the intermediate of couchettes.

  • Art says:

    I believe this is still going
    https://www.sleeper.scot/

    • Rob says:

      This will be amazing with the new trains in Autumn.

      • BTC says:

        So will the prices!

        They’ve already hiked them on the old stock, will be interesting to see how they fill the new stock at inflated rates during the off-season.

        • JamesB says:

          The price structure was already published someplace and I didn’t think it was that bad.

        • BlueThroughCrimp says:

          Obviously, YMMV, but the increase for a solo traveller is quite considerable, as sharing with AN Other is no longer an option.
          The Bargain Berths that First ScotRail had have disappeared long ago, while the Two Together railcard discount goes with the new train introduction period.
          As I said, will be interesting filling the train off-season. Not sure there’ll be too many takers at £160 for a non-refundable advance in the middle of November!

        • JamesB says:

          The problem is that it is increasingly difficult to see an off season. Even in FW and Inverness hotel prices are now holding up almost year round, especially at weekends. Inverness may suffer from competition from airport though, I think somebody commented here that they now have up to 5 flights daily to London. Hopefully, once the novelty wears off we will see some reduced fares. Hopefully we will also see see Scotrail change to a different operator. I found price reasonable when factoring in the saving on a hotel night and the inclusion of a great travel experience on the West Highland line. Thus, good for the holidaymakers, but much less so for those who need to rely on it for regular travels.

        • TGLoyalty says:

          While you can’t share through them directly always opens up an opportunity for a website/forum to allow like minded “strangers” to

        • BlueThroughCrimp says:

          Shouldn’t have to enter a forum to get a berth, to be honest.

          As for Inverness and FW, fair enough, Aberdeen on the other hand has been poorly loaded for a while, it even loses a car to FW in the high season. Even in the shoulder season booking on the day of travel for the Lowlander has been easy.

          Regular travellers, and the flexipass holders, are reported as becoming disillusioned with the changes, and are now at the price point where flight and hotel is much of a muchness as the Sleeper. Lose them, and there’s hard work to fill those regular income places.

          Losing the pods is the biggest loss to the new trains. Never really explained why they were ditched.

          The new “Classic Rooms” don’t look much of an improvement over the Mark 3s for space from the early photos seen so far, with the equivalent sink area losing the hatch – a very handy place to organise – and there appears to be a lack of overhead storage shelf too.

          Still, lets see what happens.

          The best sleeper by far which I travelled in was VR’s Santa Claus Express, with old fashioned, but draught beer equipped lounge car, followed by the OeBB double-decker from Zurich to Vienna.

      • another_will says:

        Looking forward to the new trains too.
        I regularly take the sleeper to Aviemore for golf trips.
        You can take the steam train from Aviemore to Boat of Garten golf club and it stops right outside.
        It’s a very relaxing way to travel.

      • RussellH says:

        From what I have been reading, Serco (who have the Caledonian Sleeper contract) are getting very concerned that they will be losing a shedload of money on account of the economic downturn we are already experiencing – and only expecting it to get much worse.

        • JamesB says:

          Aha, I thought it was Scotrail. Is the operator likely to make much difference?

  • Geoff says:

    Did you see the Northern lights?

    • Rob says:

      No. Odds are about 1 in 10 (no one tells you this because they want to sell you £150 per head ‘midnight walk in the woods’ trips) – and the 1 in 10 is based on the whole night, and obviously you won’t stay up 24/7. That breaks down by the number of night the aurora could appear x the number of nights with clear sky.

      • flyforfun says:

        That’s why I opted to go to Norway and do a Hurtigruten 6 night trip/cruise up the coast. If the lights come out they will announce it over the tannoy in your room if you want. As it was after the first night in Bergen we had cloudy skies until our last (Halloween) were we saw a small display around 10pm, thanks to one of our shipmates telling us. I’d do it again as at I found the cruise very relaxing and fun going into all the ports.

  • Brian says:

    I’m taking the sleeper from Vienna to Rome in May. Price is less than the cost of a flight and I don’t need to travel to and from airports. Given that I need to be in Rome in the morning, it’s a much better option than catching an evening flight and paying for a hotel or getting up extremely early (and so not sleeping much that night anyway). There are two of us travelling – it costs 179 euros for a Deluxe Double with en suite shower and toilet.

  • DTB says:

    still remember the sleeper train from Bangkok to Chaing mai, You could see the tracks below via the squat toilet

    • The Original Nick says:

      They’re still operating but some now have been updated.

    • Colin MacKinnon says:

      Do not, ever, take the sleeper from Yangon to Mandalay. The compartment looked like a drug drug addict had been left in it for days with an axe. It hadn’t been cleaned since the British left. And the track was so bad it was like being on a galloping horse ( although the train is probably slower than a horse) At times my legs were thrown up off the bunk and into the air. I seriously thought we were going to be derailed and die – but consoled myself that if it hadn’t happened in the last 30 years since it was cleaned it wouldn’t happen tonight.

    • Rob says:

      Ah yes, I think I did that one too.

  • MAY L LIM says:

    You mean frozen lake not late

  • BTC says:

    Did the Lisbon to Madrid Trenhotel 3 weeks ago.
    Restaurant car was fabulous, €17 for a three course meal (main was 3 small steaks and rice) with 2 small beers.
    Ride quality in Portugal was so, err, good that it took until Spain before I managed a decent sleep!

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