Please sign in to post.

Seat Reservations for TGV Lyria with Eurail Select Pass

After researching a variety of transportation and fare options, I made the decision to purchase a first class Eurail Select Pass valid in France and Switzerland for 5 days in 2 months. The $349 cost was $250 less than the of tickets for my planned journeys. I then went to the SNCF website to purchase seat reservations, with the full knowledge that the trip from Paris to Zurich on the Lyria service also includes a meal and is thus about $80 each way. I could not find Eurail passes listed, but did find an option for a Swiss General Abbonnement and Forfait 1st class for the SNCF. Using this option the fare was 68 Euros each way, within the $80 range I was expecting. I now have these confirmed and held on a Purchase Option to be paid by Friday, 7 April. Is this the correct method to reserve the seats? I am concerned because of the lack of the Eurail Pass option, but the GA and Forfait 1 are effectively the same function. Please advise me as to whether I am correct or if I should cancel the seat reservation option.

Thank you for your assistance,
Kevin

Posted by
3991 posts

I don't know the answer to your question but if no one here does you can try going to http://www.seat61.com/email.htm and click on the e-mail link and ask the man who runs that sight, who is an expert on European train travel. Good luck.

Posted by
281 posts

I got the answer to my own question. I posted this on Friday, the last day of March, and then on Saturday, the first day of April, the reservations became available on the RailEurope website. After consulting with Rick Steves travel advisors via telephone, I decided it was safest to just purchase the reservation through RailEurope. When I printed it out, says:

"Lyria Pass 1-Holders of a valid pass covering France or valid pass covering Switzerland (combination of a general CFF season ticket, a SNCF season ticket, EuRail pass or and InterRail pass."
And, it shows a fare of 68 Euros, exactly the fare shown on the SNCF site when I put in the information as described in my original post. Today that would be $75. RailEurope charged $82, plus $7.95 booking fee for me to print it at home. I would conclude from this that I could have used the SNCF booking and would have paid $150 (at today's rates) plus a credit card exchange fee of 1% or $1.50.
The real pertinent information is that I could have booked the same trains as of today for 148 Euros on a no-changes ticket, or $163.
Next time I will not be lured in by a rail pass special.