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When taking the train to Charles De Gaulle Airport in Paris, we were confronted with two airport stations.

Paris Metro Map RER B

It was not clear to us what the difference between these two stations might be, and at which one we should alight to catch an international flight. Unfortunately our flight bookings neglected to include a terminal number.

With my "petit peu de Francais" I bravely attempted to ask fellow passengers which seemed to yield an indication of Terminal 2 for international flights. Although this contradicted the very little reliable information we could scrape together via frantic internetting, we passed through 1, and alighted at 2, but it just didn't look right.

Ok, don't panic we said, without going through the barriers, we got back on the train and returned to Terminal 1... still not sure. We found an information booth on the platform of "Aeroport 1", but the attendant seemed to be insisting that she was on her break and could not answer questions right now, but maybe my French was so bad I misunderstood. She didn't seem to have any English, German, Spanish, or Italian either. I didn't bother attempting to converse in Indonesian or Latin; she was clearly not interested in helping right now and it was rude of me to keep trying.

By following the crowd, we discovered that there is another rail line, I think, which connects the two CDG terminals and some parking stations. We got on that one and went a few more stations alighting at another, but different to the RER B, platform "Terminal 1", which ultimately took us where we needed to be.

It was confusing and stressful.

  1. What is the difference between the two "RER B" Aeroport stations?
  2. Is it necessary to switch off the RER B train, and onto a separate rail line which serves only the airport, to get to the International gates?
  3. What is the most efficient way to get oneself from a downtown Paris Metro station to the Charles De Gaulle International Airport luggage check-ins, passport control, and gates, etc?
John95
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2 Answers2

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The Charles de Gaulle airport (which locals call “Roissy”) is large. It has three terminals and two suburban train (RER) stations.

As the signs in the trains tell you, as well as the automated announcement when you arrive at the station, alight at “Aéroport Charles-de-Gaulle 1” for terminals 1 and 3, and at “Aéroport Charles-de-Gaulle 2” for terminal 2. Station 1 is actually at terminal 3 and you need to take another short-distance train (“CDGVAL”) to reach terminal 1. Station 2 is in the middle of the gates at terminal 2. Just follow the signs in French and English (and some in other languages).

The separation between terminals is not about domestic vs international flights. There are international flights (both Schengen and non-Schengen) at all terminals (I'm not sure if there are domestic flights at all terminals, it might vary from year to year).

Most if not all airlines only fly from one terminal, and there are signs in the trains that list the airlines and the terminal they fly from. Note that what matters is the operating airline, not the airline that sold your ticket; often airlines that are in an alliance fly from the same terminal but not always.

Your ticket should specify which terminal you fly from. Your boarding pass, if you already have it, definitely specifies which terminal you fly from. If you have Internet access, you can find scheduled flights on the airport website.

If you get off the RER at the wrong station, you can take the CDGVAL train to get to the terminal you want.

What is the most efficient way to get oneself from a downtown Paris Metro station to the Charles De Gaulle International Airport luggage check-ins, passport control, and gates, etc?

Generally RER B is the most convenient unless you want to pay for a taxi. However, you might want to avoid it at peek hours (going into Paris around 8–10 am, and to the airport around 17–19 (5–7 pm)) because it can get overcrowded. A ticket between Roissy Charles-de-Gaulle airport and Paris is valid to any RER station inside the Paris city limits (zone 1) or to any metro station (regardless of zone). (A basic metro ticket or the Navigo Liberté equivalent is not valid on the RER outside Paris.) Also note that at the moment, the line closes early in the evening on weekdays due to construction, and when that happens there might be a replacement bus service (which takes the RER ticket); read and follow the signs.

The main alternative is the Roissybus express bus from Opéra. It's designed to fit luggage, but can get very crowded sometimes too. One ticket (sold on a machine at the bus stop) just gets you onto that bus. (The former “car Air France” a.k.a. “Bus Direct” service shut off during Covid and is not planned to resume.)

There's a separate network of night buses if for late night arrivals and early morning departures. There are also some commuter services, but they aren't really relevant for people traveling from downtown Paris, especially with luggage. See the airport website for more information.

attendant seemed to be insisting that she was on her break and could not answer questions right now (…); she was clearly not interested in helping right now and it was rude of me to keep trying.

Yes, it was rude to keep requiring someone to work from free.

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    As for the last part - this is what also gives a bad first impression of our France when someone stumbles upon such a situation. if she was on her break she should not have attended the booth, or placed a sign or something. – WoJ Jun 20 '23 at 13:22
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    Couple of quick notes for other readers who may see this question. Firstly, it's important to get the right ticket from Paris to CDG: a t+ ticket will let you board the RER within Paris, but you're likely to get a fine when you try to get out at CDG. Secondly, if you get CDG1/CDG2 wrong, CDGVAL is completely free (and possibly more frequent than the RER), whereas going from RER CDG 1 to/from RER CDG 2 would probably require a ticket if you've already exited via the RER gates. – Bruno Jun 20 '23 at 13:30
  • Furthermore, note that RER B is not running on weekends for now (until 2025?) as they are doing construction. Shuttle buses run to/from Stade de France - St Denis where you can access the RER D instead to get to Central Paris. This was my experience two weeks ago. I took the Roissybus back to CDG without a hitch. Terminal 2 is large, with A, B, C, D, E, and F buildings, but easy access between them. – Jon Custer Jun 20 '23 at 16:23
  • @JonCuster I can't see any trace of suspension on weekends for the coming quarter. The line has been closed a few weekends, but it's not a common thing, and no weekend closure is planned during the coming summer. – Gilles 'SO- stop being evil' Jun 20 '23 at 20:02
  • (+1) Not enough to justify a separate answer but I recall that some trains (used to) have a sign with a list of airlines and the associated terminal somewhere close to the doors. May be worth looking for that. – Relaxed Jun 20 '23 at 20:30
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    @Relaxed Yes, that's the signs I meant in my 4th paragraph. – Gilles 'SO- stop being evil' Jun 20 '23 at 20:41
  • Oh, I overlooked that when reading the answer, thank you. – Relaxed Jun 20 '23 at 21:21
  • @Gilles'SO-stopbeingevil' - well I guess I hit the jackpot then on two consecutive weekends. Sigh. https://www.parisaeroport.fr/en/passengers/news/information-disruptions-access-airports has the official info. Looks like there is night closures: "From 20 June to 8 September, Monday to Friday: interruption between Gare du Nord and Aéroport CDG2 from 10.45 pm" – Jon Custer Jun 20 '23 at 22:14
  • @Gilles'SO-stopbeingevil' It is not possible to arrive at Terminal 1 directly from RER-B: change to the CDGVAL line and take another short train trip to T1. Is this correct? – John95 Jun 21 '23 at 08:00
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    @John95 Yes, that's correct. Station 1 is actually at terminal 3, not terminal 1. You need to take CDGVAL at station 1 to get to terminal 1. – Gilles 'SO- stop being evil' Jun 21 '23 at 09:16
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    work from free? Do you mean to say work for free? I should delete my little complaint about the attendant since it is not relevant to the question/answer. However, in my defense, it was very strange that someone sitting in uniform at an official "information" booth appearing open for business would be so unhelpful. There was nothing visual to indicate she might be "taking a break". If so, perhaps close the window and/or put up a 'closed--back soon' sign. – John95 Jun 22 '23 at 04:28
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RER B stations at Paris-CDG airport:

Terminals 1 and 3: "Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 1" station
• Terminal 1 is available by the free CDGVAL rail shuttle (journey time: 6 minutes).
• Terminal 3 is available by pedestrian walkway.

Terminal 2: "Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGV" station
• Terminals 2C, 2D, 2E et 2F are availables by foot and by moving walkway.
• Terminal 2A is available by foot or by free N1 shuttle from RER station, level 5.
• Terminal 2G is available by free N2 shuttle, from Terminal 2F, exit 2.10.

RER B stations in Paris:

  • Paris : Paris-Gare du Nord, Châtelet-Les Halles, Saint-Michel-Notre-Dame, Luxembourg, Palais-Royal, Denfert-Rochereau, Cité Universitaire
  • Link with Paris-Orly airport by connecting with OrlyVal at station "Antony"

Frequency: Every 10-15 minutes on weekdays

Credit: https://www.parisaeroport.fr/en/passengers/access/paris-charles-de-gaulle/public-transport/rer-b:

Map from https://parisbytrain.com/charles-de-gaulle-airport-cdg-to-paris-by-train/?amp:

enter image description here

Regarding your comment:

our flight bookings neglected to include a terminal number.

Search the flight number on Google. It'll typically indicate the terminal number. Or one can look at the airport departure page (https://www.airport-charles-de-gaulle.com/cdg-departures for CDG) to see the terminal number.

John95
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