TravelTill

Travel to Stockholm


JuteVilla
g a lengthy 4� hours to reach Stockholm but has first class seatings and a real restaurant onboard. WiFi is included in the price.

By bus

The City Terminal (City terminalen  is the main bus terminal, directly connected to the main train station, Stockholms Central and the T Centralen subway station. There are multiple daily departures to most other cities in Sweden, as well as a few international routes. Swebus Express  operates routes to Copenhagen and Oslowith several daily departures, and a twice-weekly service to Berlin. Eurolines  has some departures to Copenhagen. Smaller operators offer connections with Prague,Budapest, Zagreb, Banja Luka among other cities.

By boat

There cruiseferries serving Stockholm fall in two categories. The international luxury cruise ships (see cruising the Baltic Sea), and the local Baltic Sea ferries.

The Baltic Sea ferries, locally known as finlandsb�tar ("Finland boat"), link Stockholm to Helsinki, Mariehamn and Turku inFinland, Riga in Latvia and Tallinn in Estonia every day. Stockholm is the main Swedish terminal for the Baltic Sea cruises - over 12 million passengers pass through the city's port each year. They are by far the cheapest way to get to and from these cities from Stockholm.

If you intend to use the boats to travel to- or from- Stockholm, it is almost always cheaper to book a cruise (kryssning), or even two head-to-head cruises and discard the returns, rather than buy one-way tickets. Tickets can be had for as low as 80 SEK for a full 4-person cabin, making it practically the cheapest accommodation one can find in a high-income country - at 10 SEK/night/person. for a two-night Stockholm-Helsinki return cruise (provided you book early and/or last minute during the weekdays), and should almost never (even for a weekend cruise in high season) exceed 400 SEK for the cheapest type of 4-bed cabin. A one-way ticket, for a shared berth, in comparison,
JuteVilla