Honouring the most inspiring campaigns that connect Europe by rail
- 12/10/2025
- 22 Day
This year’s Rail Tourism Awards attracted
23 submissions showcasing the power of rail to connect destinations,
communities and travellers.
The European Travel Commission (ETC) and Eurail have
announced the winners of the 2025 Rail Tourism Awards, recognising excellence
in campaigns that promote rail as an exciting, sustainable and meaningful way
to explore Europe. The awards were presented at The Great Connection in
Utrecht, Eurail’s inaugural collaborative gathering of marketers and creative
professionals focused on how creativity, branding and storytelling can support
the future of rail tourism.
Now in its fifth edition, the Rail Tourism Awards
spotlight initiatives that demonstrate the freedom, low-impact nature and
cultural richness of rail travel. This year’s competition featured 23
submissions from rail operators, national tourism organisations, marketing
agencies and other tourism bodies across Europe. Four awards were presented:
Best International Campaign, Best National Campaign, Best Green Campaign and
the Jury Prize.
Entries were evaluated by a diverse panel of judges on
creativity, relevance, centrality of rail and campaign impact. The 2025 jury
included Elke Dens (The Travel Foundation), Nicky Gardner and Susanne Kries
(hidden Europe), Marit Ruuda (European Commission, DG Mobility and Transport),
Mark Smith (“The Man in Seat 61”), and Owen Farrington (krow.x).
Go Sustainable sets a new standard for
business travel
Switzerland Tourism, together with Eurostar, Evolve
Events and partners, received the Best International Campaign award for Go
Sustainable. This initiative reshaped expectations for international business
travel by taking 35 UK event professionals on a fully rail-based journey from
London to Switzerland. By turning travel time into moments of collaboration and
discovery, the campaign showed how low-impact business mobility can deliver
high professional value. Judges highlighted its ambition, strong cross-sector
cooperation and its ability to influence a segment of travellers that is often
difficult to shift towards greener choices.
Swiss Bliss reimagines Switzerland through
quiet discovery and off-season charm
Rail Europe was recognised with the Best National
Campaign award for its Swiss Bliss project. The campaign offered a refreshed
view of Switzerland by shifting attention away from crowded hotspots and
highlighting quieter towns, scenic secondary routes and the ease of off-season
travel. Through authentic creator-led content and warm, tactile storytelling,
Swiss Bliss encouraged travellers to embrace unhurried journeys and spontaneous
detours made possible by the rail network. The judges praised its emotional
resonance, strategic clarity and strong ability to inspire more balanced,
region-diversifying travel across Switzerland.
Sowing a Sunny Tomorrow turns Slovenia’s
rail corridors into blooming community landscapes
Slovenske železnice received the Best Green Campaign
award for Sowing a Sunny Tomorrow, which transformed railway corridors across
Slovenia into vibrant sunflower fields planted by children, local communities
and municipalities. The campaign used
sunflowers as a symbol of renewal, biodiversity and climate-conscious travel,
creating a visual and emotional link between passengers, landscapes and the
rail network. The judges were particularly impressed that such an impactful
initiative was delivered in-house with minimal resources. They praised its
originality, strong sustainability message and ability to inspire widespread
public participation rooted in local pride.
Feelings on Track brings mental well-being
to the heart of slow European travel
Sweet and Silverrail received this year’s Jury Prize
for Feelings on Track, an emotionally driven campaign connecting train travel
with honest conversations about mental health. The project followed the
creators of Sweden’s largest mental-health podcast, Ångestpodden, on a ten-day
Interrail journey through ten countries, inviting strangers to sit in “The
Conversation Seat” to share personal stories. A short film premiered at
Stockholm’s Bio Rio cinema before spreading across YouTube, social media and
radio. Feelings on Track stood out for turning a rail journey into a powerful
cultural and social project that resonated strongly with younger audiences.







