Caen to Bordeaux by Train â What the Route Actually Involves
There is no direct train from Caen to Bordeaux â but there are genuinely two ways to piece the journey together, and each suits a different kind of traveller. The straightforward option is a single ticket via Paris (Saint-Lazare â Montparnasse). The second option changes at Tours/Saint-Pierre-des-Corps instead, avoiding Paris altogether â but it isn’t sold as one itinerary, so you book it as three separate tickets, and it’s limited by how few direct CaenâTours trains run each day. Both are explained in full below, with the real trade-offs of each.
đ Route 1: Via Paris â One Ticket, Booked as Standard
Caen â Paris Saint-Lazare â Paris Montparnasse â Bordeaux Saint-Jean
From Caen: TER/Nomad train to Paris Saint-Lazare (roughly 2 hours)
Crossing Paris: MĂ©tro Line 13 from Saint-Lazare to MontparnasseâBienvenĂŒe, direct, no changes
From Montparnasse: TGV or OUIGO to Bordeaux Saint-Jean (around 2 hours, fastest services closer to 2h 08m)
Total time: ~5h 15m fastest, confirmed on SNCF Connect (one real search showed 12:02 Caen â 17:14 Bordeaux, 5h 12m). Connection: SNCF’s own itineraries typically build in around an hour for the Saint-LazareâMontparnasse transfer â that means physically leaving one station and travelling to the other by MĂ©tro, taxi or walking with your luggage.
Booking: One ticket, one fare, booked in a single search on sncf-connect.com â this is what comes up by default when you search Caen â Bordeaux.
đ Route 2: Via Tours â Three Tickets, No Paris Crossing
Caen â Tours â Saint-Pierre-des-Corps â Bordeaux Saint-Jean
Leg 1 â Caen â Tours: around 3 hours. SNCF Connect’s own timetable lists 6 connections a day on this leg, but only 2 run genuinely direct â departing Caen at roughly 07:46 and 12:49. The other 4 already involve a change at Alençon or Le Mans before you even reach Tours.
Leg 2 â Tours â Saint-Pierre-des-Corps: a short ~5-minute hop between Tours’ two stations, running very frequently (60+ services a day) â never a bottleneck.
Leg 3 â Saint-Pierre-des-Corps â Bordeaux: around 1h43mâ2h30m depending on service, with 11 trains a day â also frequent.
Total time: broadly comparable to the Paris route once waits are included. Connections: typically tight â around 10 minutes at each change â but you stay within stations throughout, with no need to leave the building or take the MĂ©tro.
Booking: not sold as one itinerary â you book three separate tickets yourself. That means more admin, and no combined-journey guarantee if an earlier leg runs late. The real constraint is Leg 1: with only two genuinely direct CaenâTours departures a day, this route only works around those specific times â miss the 07:46 and the next direct option isn’t until 12:49.
âŽïž Off the overnight ferry specifically: the 07:46 direct CaenâTours train is tight after a 06:45 arrival plus the port bus â similar to the 07:00 Paris train being too tight. If you miss it, the Tours route’s next genuinely direct departure isn’t until 12:49, which pushes arrival in Bordeaux well into the evening. For most people connecting straight off the ferry, the Paris route is the more workable option on the day; the Tours route suits journeys where you’re departing Caen later or already staying overnight.
đ€ Which to choose: If you want one ticket booked in a single search, with SNCF Connect’s own journey protections, and don’t mind a MĂ©tro transfer with luggage, take the standard Paris route. If you’d rather avoid Paris altogether, don’t mind assembling three separate tickets, and can build your day around one of the two direct CaenâTours departures, the Tours route is a genuine alternative â not a myth, just a different set of trade-offs. Either way, search each leg on sncf-connect.com to confirm live times before booking, since the CaenâTours service pattern is the thing most likely to change your plans.
đ« Fares, Frequency & Booking
SNCF Connect lists around 17 connecting services a day from Caen to Bordeaux, with departures roughly hourly through the day (a handful of very early ones aren’t realistic for anyone arriving off an overnight ferry). Trains arrive at Bordeaux Saint-Jean station, located ~2.5km from the city centre with direct tram connections. Official SNCF Connect distance for this routing is 776km by rail.
Prem’s advance:
From ~âŹ41 (combined)
Book at sncf-connect.com
Up to 4 months ahead
OUIGO (budget TGV):
From ~âŹ5â25 ParisâBordeaux
Book at ouigo.com
No luggage in overhead
Seconde/Flex:
~âŹ60â120 advance
Exchangeable/refundable
More flexibility
Search Caen â Bordeaux directly on sncf-connect.com (fully in English) â it will build the Paris-routed itinerary automatically. Booking close to the travel date costs considerably more: fares checked directly on SNCF Connect for a near-term departure run to around âŹ100, against ~âŹ41 for an advance Prem’s fare. Pets: small animals in a carrier travel free; dogs on a lead require a ticket (~âŹ7â20). Interrail and Eurail passes valid; TGV reservation fee applies (~âŹ10).
Night train â a correction: Some older guides mention an IntercitĂ©s de Nuit overnight service from Paris Austerlitz to Bordeaux. This isn’t currently accurate â the present IntercitĂ©s de Nuit network from Paris Austerlitz serves Briançon, Nice, CerbĂšre, Latour-de-Carol, Toulouse, Lourdes/Tarbes, Rodez/Albi and Aurillac, but not Bordeaux. A ParisâBordeaux night line appears only in a proposed development plan for around 2030, not a real service today. If you need to break the journey overnight, plan on a hotel in Paris or Tours instead.
Budget coach alternative: FlixBus and BlaBlaCar Bus both operate Caen â Bordeaux coach services â around 9h45mâ10h25m depending on the day, with fares typically from roughly âŹ20â30 on quiet advance dates up to âŹ50â65 closer to travel. Much slower than the train but often cheaper. Book at flixbus.co.uk or blablacar.fr.
đĄ From Bordeaux Saint-Jean station to the city centre: Tram line C runs from the station directly to the city centre (Quinconces stop, Place Gambetta, and the Chartrons district) in approximately 10â15 minutes. Single ticket: âŹ1.70 (contactless accepted on trams). A short walk along the Cours de la Marne also takes you there in around 30 minutes through the student quarter.