Search results
Orient Express is a brand of artisan travel since 1883, offering luxury trains, unique experiences and collections of rare objects. Explore the spirit of the 1960s with La Dolce Vita Orient Express in Italy, or discover the world with its hotels and sailing yachts.
- High-life
In 1883, Georges Nagelmackers created a legendary train: the...
- Trains
Trains - Orient Express | Artisan of Travel since 1883 |...
- Hotels
In 1894, 11 years after the launch of the first...
- Sailing
A 220-meter-long ocean treasure with a tonnage of 25,600...
- Heritage
For more than a century, Orient Express has embodied not...
- The Orient Express
Beginning in 2025, The Orient Express will invite travelers...
- Contact
It is intended for authorized persons in charge of managing...
- Orient Express La Dolce Vita
150 years ago, Georges Nagelmackers transformed his dreams...
- High-life
Experience the legend of the Orient Express with 17 original cars from the 1920s and 1930s, reimagined by architect Maxime d'Angeac. Discover the Bar Car, the Dining Car, the Suites and the Presidential Suite, and enjoy the spectacular and unexpected design and comfort of this iconic train.
The Orient Express was a long-distance passenger luxury train service created in 1883 by the Belgian company Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits (CIWL) that operated until 2009.
Discover the Orient Express Route of the original train as well as the Simplon Orient Express & Alberg Orient Express. Full map of all routes across Europe
Experience the Golden Age of Travel onboard the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express, the most famous luxury train in the world. Explore our 2024 and 2025 journeys across Europe, from London to Venice, Paris to Istanbul, and more.
Learn how Orient Express reinvented the art of travel with luxurious trains, hotels and objects since 1867. Discover the milestones, the mysteries and the myths of the legendary company.
Orient-Express, luxury train that ran from Paris to Constantinople (Istanbul) for more than 80 years (1883–1977). Europe’s first transcontinental express, it initially covered a route of more than 1,700 miles (about 2,740 km) that included brief stopovers in such cities as Munich, Vienna, Budapest,