Private Transfer vs. Train to Austrian Ski Resorts — Honest Comparison

Travel Tips

Private Transfer vs. Train to Austrian Ski Resorts — Honest Comparison

Innsbruck Taxi Transfer2 July 20265 min read

ÖBB's Railjet network is one of Europe's best. Private transfers are door-to-door. Both have a place in alpine ski-trip planning. Here's how the math actually works for INN-, MUC-, and SZG-served resorts.

The short answer

For groups of 4+ people, families with kids, late-arriving flights, or trips with heavy ski equipment, private transfer almost always wins on total cost-of-time. For solo travellers, couples on a budget, daytime arrivals, and routes with direct ÖBB Railjet service, train + resort connection is the better deal.

The two break points to know:

  1. At 4 people, the per-person private transfer cost roughly equals the train + ski-bag fees + resort taxi
  2. At 22:00 landing, private transfer becomes the only reliable option (last useful regional connections from Innsbruck Hbf to Arlberg/Ötztal/Paznaun drop off after ~21:30)

How they actually work

Private transfer

A pre-booked driver meets you at the airport arrivals exit with a name board. Loads your bags, drives you door-to-door to the hotel. Fixed price, flight-tracked, child seats on request. Time: airport-to-resort drive only — typically 1.5h (INN→Sölden) to 3.5h (MUC→Lech).

Train + connection

You take the airport-to-city link (S-Bahn at MUC, bus 6 at INN, bus at SZG). Then ÖBB Railjet to a regional hub (Innsbruck Hbf, Salzburg Hbf). Then a regional ÖBB train to the resort station (Sölden has no train station; St. Anton, Mayrhofen, Schladming, Zell am See do). Then resort bus or short taxi to your hotel. Time: 4-6 hours typical.

Cost comparison

For four people, INN-MUC-SZG → Tirol/Vorarlberg ski resort, one-way:

Route Train (4 people) Private transfer Difference
INN → Sölden ~€100 + €60 resort taxi ~€220 (V-Class) Transfer +€60
INN → St. Anton ~€80 + €30 resort taxi ~€220 (V-Class) Transfer +€110
MUC → St. Anton ~€280 + €60 resort taxi ~€450 (V-Class) Transfer +€110
MUC → Lech ~€280 + €60 resort taxi ~€520 (V-Class) Transfer +€180
SZG → Schladming ~€90 + €25 resort taxi ~€280 (V-Class) Transfer +€165

Notes:

  • Train prices include 2nd-class Sparschiene fares booked early; rate doubles for last-minute or 1st-class
  • Ski-bag fees (€10-25/bag depending on operator) add up across changes
  • Resort taxi rates are evening / weekend; daytime sometimes cheaper
  • Child seats in private transfer free of charge; in resort taxis usually unavailable

Time comparison

For the same routes:

Route Train door-to-door Private transfer Time saved
INN → Sölden ~3h (with bus + Hbf wait + B186 taxi) ~1.5h 1.5h saved
INN → St. Anton ~2h ~1.5h 30min saved
MUC → St. Anton ~5h with one change ~3h 2h saved
MUC → Lech ~6h with two changes ~3.5h 2.5h saved
SZG → Schladming ~3h ~1.5h 1.5h saved

Time saved matters more on a 4-day trip than a 14-day trip — losing a half-day of skiing each way costs you 25% of your trip.

When train wins

  • Solo traveller, daytime arrival: Cheapest per-person option, comfortable Railjet seats, scenic
  • Couple on a budget, no kids: Train makes sense if you have time and energy
  • Resort with direct rail station (St. Anton, Mayrhofen, Schladming, Zell am See, Bad Gastein): Removes the resort-taxi leg
  • Combining the trip with a city stop (Munich, Innsbruck, Salzburg, Vienna): Train integrates naturally

When transfer wins

  • Family with kids under 12: Train changes with sleepy kids = misery
  • Group of 4+: Per-person economics flip in transfer's favour
  • Heavy ski/board equipment: One load vs. four hand-carries across changes
  • Late-arriving flight (after 22:00): Trains stop running; private transfer 24/7
  • Resort with no train station (Sölden, Galtür, Ischgl, Lech, Zürs, Saalbach): You'll need a resort taxi anyway after the train, the cost adds up
  • Saturday changeover with peak-week traffic: Driver picks the route that's moving; train has no flexibility
  • Carrying a buggy + ski bags + suitcases: V-Class fits everything; trains require playing Tetris

The resort-station map (which resorts have direct rail)

ÖBB stations at or in walking distance of resort centre:

  • Tirol: St. Anton am Arlberg (S16 station in centre), Mayrhofen (Zillertal regional), Innsbruck (city, all resorts via local bus)
  • Vorarlberg: Langen am Arlberg (5 min from Lech via taxi/bus), Bludenz (Montafon access)
  • Salzburger Land: Zell am See, Schladming, Bad Gastein, Saalfelden (close to Saalbach)
  • Carinthia: Bad Hofgastein, Mallnitz (Mölltal access)

Resorts WITHOUT useful rail (need road transfer regardless):

  • Tirol: Sölden, Obergurgl, Hochgurgl, Galtür, Ischgl, Kühtai, Seefeld
  • Vorarlberg: Lech, Zürs, Stuben, Damüls
  • Salzburg: Saalbach-Hinterglemm (use Saalfelden + 20 min drive), Obertauern

For these, the train's "savings" disappear once you add the resort-taxi leg. Private transfer pricing flattens.

Hybrid strategy: train one way, transfer the other

This is genuinely the best plan for some trips:

  • Train inbound, transfer outbound: Arrive relaxed via Railjet, take a transfer back to catch an early or late flight without train stress
  • Transfer inbound, train outbound: Land late, get to hotel fast; on the way back, you're not in a hurry for the early-morning resort taxi
  • Train one direction, group of 2 splits with friends: Mix-and-match for cost optimization

We can quote either single-direction transfer; the cost is roughly half a return.

A note on luggage handling

Train: You carry all bags through changes. Munich Hbf to Innsbruck Hbf has elevators but they get crowded on changeover Saturdays. Innsbruck Hbf to platform-7-for-Arlberg-train involves stairs in some sections.

Transfer: Driver loads at airport, unloads at hotel. Done.

For a couple with two carry-ons it's a non-issue. For a family with two ski bags + four suitcases + two boot bags + a buggy, the train option is a workout.

FAQ

Do ÖBB trains carry skis and snowboards? Yes — Railjet 2nd class has overhead racks, 1st class has dedicated ski-bag space. Regional trains are more variable. Most operators charge a small ski-bag fee (€10-25 depending on route).

Can I combine a transfer one way with a train the other? Yes. We quote single-direction transfers; you can pair with a Railjet ticket booked separately on ÖBB.at.

What about cross-border trains from Munich to Austrian resorts? Munich → Innsbruck Railjet runs roughly hourly, 1h 50min direct. From Munich you can also take RegioBahn-style services to Garmisch and onward to Mittenwald/Innsbruck — slower but cheaper. Direct Munich → St. Anton is one Railjet change at Innsbruck.

Is private transfer worth booking for a 7-night trip if I'm staying in one resort the whole time? Yes — you pay only twice (in + out). Once you're at the resort, ski buses cover everything. The transfer is purely for the airport-to-resort and back legs.

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Innsbruck Taxi Transfer

2 Jul 2026