EU railways
EU high-speed rail lines grew to 8,556 km in 2023


In 2023, the EU railway network had 200,947 km of railway lines, with the highest densities being found in and around main cities and other population hubs.
The highest railway network density was registered in Czechia, with 123.2 metres of railway lines per km². Other EU countries with high densities included Belgium (119.2 m/km²), Germany (109.5 m/km²) and Luxembourg (104.8 m/km²).
On the other end, the lowest railway network densities were found in Greece (14.0 m/km²) and Finland (19.4 m/km²). Low densities were also recorded in Sweden (26.8 m/km²), Estonia (27.2 m/km²), Portugal (27.8 m/km²), Latvia (28.9 m/km²) and Ireland (29.8 m/km²).
Source datasets: rail_if_line_tr, reg_area3 and enpe_reg_area3
Expansion of high-speed railway lines in the EU
In the EU railway network, high-speed railway lines designed for speed of 250 km/h or more often span national borders, facilitating seamless high-speed travel across the EU. This interoperable network has seen significant growth over the past decade. From 2013 to 2023, it expanded by 2 744 km (+47.2%) to 8 556 km.
In 2023, Spain led the way with 3,190 km of high-speed lines, an increase of 66% from 1 919 km in 2013, followed by France with 2,748 km (+35% from 2 036 km), Germany with 1,163 km (+32% from 881 km) and Italy with 1,097 km (+63% from 675 km). Belgium recorded 211 km of high-speed lines and the Netherlands 90 km (both unchanged from 2013). Denmark accounts for 57 km, inaugurated in 2019.

Source dataset: rail_if_line_sp
For more information
- Statistics Explained article on characteristics of the railway network in Europe
- Thematic section on transport
- Database on transport
- Webinar on transport statistics
Share this article:
-
Ukraine1 day ago
I hate to admit it, but Trump is right about Ukraine
-
Africa3 days ago
Allegations of misconduct shadow Zimbabwe’s Olympic icon Kirsty Coventry
-
Energy4 days ago
Why 2023 was a turning point for renewable energy – and what comes next
-
Fact Check4 days ago
Trapped in the feed: How endless scrolling warps our reality and wears us down