The €49 Deutschlandticket: easy to start, hard to stop
The Deutschlandticket arrived in May 2023 as one of the best deals in European travel: €49 a month for unlimited regional trains, trams and buses across the whole country. What almost nobody mentioned at the sign-up screen was how much harder it would be to leave than to join.
Unlike the 9-euro summer ticket it replaced, which simply expired, the €49 version is an open-ended subscription that renews on its own every month. To stop it, you have to cancel by the 10th of the month for it to take effect at the end of that same month. Miss the 10th, even by a day, and you are charged for another full month.
That deadline was rarely shown where it mattered. Riders reported no warning on the order page, cancellation notices buried in German-only app messages, and cancel buttons that were oddly hard to find. The rules were not even the same everywhere: you can only cancel through the exact operator you bought from, and some providers set the deadline earlier than the 10th. Plenty of people followed the steps, thought they had cancelled, and still watched €49 leave their account the next month.
It is a small sum, but the friction is the point. A pass that takes two minutes to start should not need a diary reminder and a careful read of the fine print to stop. If you are riding it for a slow trip through Germany, set an alarm for the 9th, cancel through the same portal you bought it from, and keep the confirmation.
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