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How to Claim

ICE International Delay Compensation

If your ICE International train was delayed 60 minutes or more, you are entitled to 25% of your ticket price (60–119 min) or 50% (120+ min) under EU law. Submit within 90 days.

65.8%

on time in 2024

7.2 min

average delay

Most delayed routes

  • · Frankfurt-Paris
  • · Cologne-Brussels
  • · Munich-Vienna

Claiming from ICE International: what to know

ICE International serves cross-border routes including Frankfurt–Paris, Cologne–Brussels, and Munich–Vienna. EU Regulation 2021/782 applies to the German portion of your journey regardless of where you boarded. All claims go to Deutsche Bahn (the operating carrier) via bahn.de/fahrgastrechte. International routes account for the operator's 65.8% on-time rate in 2024 — congestion on cross-border corridors is a major factor.

What You Are Owed

Under EU 2021/782, if your ICE International train arrived at your destination 60 minutes or more late, you are entitled to compensation. You do not need to prove the cause — the delay alone is sufficient.

  • 60–119 min delay:: 25% of your ticket price
  • 120+ min delay:: 50% of your ticket price

You have 90 days from the date of travel to submit your claim directly to ICE International.

What You Need Before You Start

  • Your ticket: — e-ticket, PDF, or physical ticket (a photo is fine)
  • Booking reference: — on your confirmation email
  • Journey details: — route, date, and train number if known
  • Bank details: — for the payout

You do not need to prove the delay independently. ICE International has the delay records on their systems.

How to Claim Online (Fastest Method)

The quickest way is via ICE International's online form at https://www.bahn.de/fahrgastrechte.

  • Go to ICE International's passenger rights page on their website
  • Sign in or continue as a guest
  • Enter your journey details: route, date, and delay length
  • Enter your ticket price and upload your ticket or booking confirmation
  • Choose your payout method — bank transfer
  • Submit — you will receive a confirmation email with a reference number

How to Claim by Email

If you prefer not to use the online form, email ICE International's customer services with:

  • Subject:: Delay Compensation Claim — [your booking reference]
  • Your full name and contact details
  • Journey details: route, date, and how long you were delayed
  • Ticket price paid
  • Your preferred payout method and bank details
  • Your ticket attached as a PDF or image

Check ICE International's website for their current customer service email address.

How to Claim by Post

Post is accepted but slower. Send a letter with all the details above plus a copy of your ticket to ICE International's customer services address (listed on their website). Use recorded delivery and keep a copy of everything you send.

What Happens Next

ICE International must respond within 30 days under EU Regulation 2021/782. Most decisions arrive within 2–3 weeks. If approved, payment is made by bank transfer. If rejected, they must give a reason in writing.

If Your Claim Is Rejected

A rejection is not final. Common reasons include:

  • Extraordinary circumstances: — ICE International may claim the delay was outside their control. Under EU Regulation 2021/782, most delays remain compensable even for infrastructure failures or weather.
  • Missing evidence: — resubmit with your ticket clearly attached
  • Wrong claim route: — ensure you used the correct form or email address

If rejected without good reason, escalate to the Eisenbahn-Bundesamt (EBA) at eba.bund.de — Germany's federal rail regulator — or contact the Schlichtungsstelle Nahverkehr for regional disputes.

**Tip:** If ICE International has not responded within 30 days, follow up in writing quoting your claim reference and the 30-day response deadline under EU Regulation 2021/782.

Common questions

How long do I have to claim from ICE International?

You have 90 days from the date of travel. Claims submitted after this deadline are typically refused, so submit as soon as possible.

Do I need proof that my ICE International train was delayed?

ICE International has the delay records on their systems. You need your ticket as proof of purchase and travel, but you do not need to independently prove the delay occurred.

What if ICE International rejects my claim?

A rejection is not final. You can resubmit with additional evidence or escalate free of charge to your national rail regulator — escalation is free and no lawyer is required.

Can I claim if I booked my ICE International ticket through Trainline or Omio?

Yes. Your claim goes directly to ICE International (the train operator), not the booking platform. Your booking reference from Trainline or Omio is sufficient.

TrainOwed handles your ICE International claim — no paperwork, no chasing. We take 1% only if you win.

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