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First Europa Park Trip Planned.

Hi, this is a first post so will probably be a bit long. Will put a TLDR section at the bottom.

First, a bit off background. I've always lived in the far top right corner of England and theme parks didn't figure large in our childhood days. a couple of trips to Lightwater Valley on the bus (Soopa Loop and The Rat!), and outings to Mirapolis and Parc Asterix on the French Exchange but that was about it.

A few decades(!) later and, following my 'sensible' university/hardworking/child rearing years, I've had a re-awakening of my love for theme parks. I'm now husband to a wonderful wife and dad to two fantastic kids (10 and 13yo now) and, wouldn't you know it, my kids have realised that they are also rollercoaster aficionados.

Living where we do, pretty much any theme park is a bit of an expedition. Flamingoland is possible as a day trip, but only with about 6hrs driving for the round trip. for this reason (and the same issues often quoted with UK theme parks) I've been focusing more on European theme parks.

In the past couple of years, I've taken my family to:

Plopsaland (The RTH - just wow. Currently my favourite and it was so quiet we could sit-on for multiple rides).

Flamingoland (Not the best day out. Weather didn't help but Sik was down all day and my kids aren't tall enough for Velocity. Kumali was good, but the whole place had a bit of a tired, unloved feel and looked like it could do with a good spruce-up).

The Efteling for 3 nights. (Fantastical. We're still humming the ride theme tunes. Dance Macabre and Baron were the stand-outs for us).

Alton Towers. (An enjoyable weekend at the end of last season, but very expensive and ride-ops weren't always what they should've been. My 10yo was single-ridering The Smiler by the end to get more rides in 😂)

Unfortunately my wife does not share my and our kids' enthusiasm for theme park rides. Past inner-ear and neck issues mean she's very risk-averse about such things. Max and Moritz and Dance Macabre at Efteling were her limit. Conversely, our kids seem to think that anything less than the most extreme rides are 'for little kids'; I have to pretty much drag them onto things like the Runaway Mine Train at AT.

Later this year I have a significant birthday and I've decided to celebrate by taking my family to EP. It will be during October, so Traumatica will also be an option. Flights run Fridays and Mondays- I don't think 3 days will be long enough so we're going for a full week- 6 days on site. As it's a treat, we're pushing the boat out and booking onsite hotels.

I've already booked the bare bones of the holiday. Flights. Hotel Kronasar 3 nights. Hotel Bell Rock 4 nights. 2 days in Rulantica. 3 days at EP. Dinner at Eatrenalin (particularly looking forward to that!). I'm thinking that my very understanding wife will spend some time in the various hotel spas and pools while the kids and I indulge our coaster passions. Will maybe also have time for a day out somewhere to get a bit of local culture; Freiburg perhaps.

TLDR: What I haven't yet sorted out is transport to/from Basel airport. Our flights in/out are at sensible, middle of the day times so public transport is possible but it appears to take at least 4 stages (bus to Basel SBB, Train, Train, Bus/taxi to hotel). Will be travelling as light as possible but that still means probably 4 large cabin bags to negotiate, so the logistics might not be too much fun with kids in tow.
Taxis seem to cost from around 250Euro/trip booked in advance. Just wondering - is that likely to be much less if we just rock up and take our chances?
Car rental would also be an option, and the headline figures seem quite cheap but maybe the price you end up paying isn't so attractive with hidden fees, insurance etc? I'm also wondering whether its an easy process to hire a car in France/ Switzerland and drive it into Germany.
What would be the best option for us? I'm not averse to throwing a bit of money at a problem to make it go away, but the jaunt is already quite expensive so if money could be better spent elsewhere then I'd rather do that.

Thanks.
 
TLDR: What I haven't yet sorted out is transport to/from Basel airport. Our flights in/out are at sensible, middle of the day times so public transport is possible but it appears to take at least 4 stages (bus to Basel SBB, Train, Train, Bus/taxi to hotel). Will be travelling as light as possible but that still means probably 4 large cabin bags to negotiate, so the logistics might not be too much fun with kids in tow.
Taxis seem to cost from around 250Euro/trip booked in advance. Just wondering - is that likely to be much less if we just rock up and take our chances?
Car rental would also be an option, and the headline figures seem quite cheap but maybe the price you end up paying isn't so attractive with hidden fees, insurance etc? I'm also wondering whether its an easy process to hire a car in France/ Switzerland and drive it into Germany.
What would be the best option for us? I'm not averse to throwing a bit of money at a problem to make it go away, but the jaunt is already quite expensive so if money could be better spent elsewhere then I'd rather do that.

Thanks.
If you can drive, I recommend hiring a car from Basel Airport for the week as I did; it will be much cheaper than taxis and gives you more flexibility. Also, if you have time before your flight home after getting back to the airport, I highly recommend getting the airport bus 50 into Basel city centre and spending a few hours there. It only takes 20 minutes each way and stops outside the train station (you get back on there as well), and Basel is a beautiful city.
 
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i know many people rent a car and i can't speak to that having not done so but on my visit at the back end of 2024 in december we found public transport from basel an absolute cinch. 4 of us, 18/21 year olds included so slightly older but certainly a doable option from my perspective. trains were spacious and had ample seat/baggage room. admittedly you may find the airport bus back and forth slightly busier.
 
I'm doing virtually the same trip for the first time albeit in May and we'll be getting a taxi each way so i can update you how that goes.

I looked at car hire but the difference in cost was negligible and as we'd not use the car for anything else it seemed like an extra stress.

Am also dreading the new European Visa system as there are already horror stories of multi-hour queues and we're in off peak season:

 
Thankyou @Bowser - it would be really helpful to hear how you get on in May. Are you planning to book taxi transfers in advance or just turn up and see what’s available?

I wasn’t aware of the new border control system. Hopefully it’ll all be sorted out by October 🤞
 
Thankyou @Bowser - it would be really helpful to hear how you get on in May. Are you planning to book taxi transfers in advance or just turn up and see what’s available?

I wasn’t aware of the new border control system. Hopefully it’ll all be sorted out by October 🤞

Probably book in advance. Certainly for the return journey.

There are Ubers from the airport but might not be too reliable for such a long journey.
 
Am also dreading the new European Visa system as there are already horror stories of multi-hour queues and we're in off peak season:

That’s pretty much Basel Airport anyway and after that if you have hold luggage it still wouldn’t of arrived at the baggage carousel 😂

I nearly always used the bus/train/bus route. It’s a bit time consuming, but the DB App is very helpful in finding your bearings. However with a family in tow, maybe a hire car could be a better option.

The ticket you get for the bus at the airport to the city can also be used to take the tram to Basel Bad too. They are purchased from the machine by the bus stop. Buses run every 10 minutes and are usually bang on time. Whilst ticket checks are rare, they do happen. My last trip got checked on the bus and tram. Caught. Few by surprise 😂

Worth noting though that if you end up on the regional RB27 from Basel Bad to Freiburg, it can get very crowded, and quite noisy (people haven’t heard of headphones yet in Germany it seem 😱).

The RB26 from Freiburg to Ringshiem is better, but can often get put in to a passing loop to allow late running ICE trains to pass. So that +10 connection for the bus can end up with seconds to spare and a mad dash.

The RE7 regional express is fine and sometimes operates from Basel SBB.
 
That’s pretty much Basel Airport anyway and after that if you have hold luggage it still wouldn’t of arrived at the baggage carousel 😂

Well that's not encouraging, sounds like it's very much French and not Swiss?
 
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