Milford on Sea
How to Pick the Right Side of a Coastal Train
Scenic Rail and Sea Routes· 5 min· Europe

How to Pick the Right Side of a Coastal Train

By Eira Lindqvist · 2025-04-12

This sounds trivial, but few things ruin a coastal train ride faster than spending it watching the wrong window. A little planning gets you the seat you actually want.

Europe coastline, archive image

How to figure it out

Pull up the route on a map. Note which direction you are traveling. The water side is your side. If in doubt, ask the conductor before the train fills up. They almost always know.

"Half a train carriage is wasted on people who did not check the map."

Travel tips

A few practical notes.

  • 01Travel midweek when possible, weekends along the coast can fill up fast
  • 02Bring a real waterproof shell, not just a wind layer
  • 03Carry a small thermos, hot coffee at a windy harbor is a small luxury
  • 04Download offline maps, signal drops near cliffs and on long ferry crossings
  • 05Talk to harbor staff and bakery owners, they always know where the locals eat

A route to try

If this article moved you, try this trip.

Build a two or three day version of the Europe ideas above. Pair one of our curated routes with a single ferry crossing, and give yourself two nights in the same harbor town. Slowness is part of the plan.

Browse routes

Frequently asked

Reader questions.

When is the best time to visit?
Shoulder seasons, late spring and early autumn, tend to give you the softest light and the quietest harbors. Summer is busier but the days are long.
Do I need to book ferries in advance?
For walk-on passengers in most northern routes, same day tickets are fine. With a car in peak summer, book at least a week ahead, sometimes longer for the popular crossings.
Is the weather a problem?
Not really. Rain, fog and wind are part of the atmosphere here. Pack layers, waterproof shoes and a calm attitude, and the weather becomes part of the experience.
Can I travel without a car?
Yes. Most of the routes we cover combine trains, coastal buses and ferries. A car gives you flexibility, but you lose the slowness that makes these trips good.

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