Night trains of Sweden (Swedish: ) are over-night sleeping car services provided by three different operators across Sweden, one of these trains terminates in Narvik in Norway, and one runs from Stockholm to Berlin.
SJ operates its night trains with a variety of service levels, they offer seats, couchettes (Swedish: ), a bed in a sleeping compartment (Swedish: ) or a private 1-class sleeping compartment with an en-suite shower and WC, not all service levels are available on all night trains.
As of 2026, SJ operates night trains on the following routes:
RDC Deutschland operates on behalf of SJ a night train between Stockholm to Malmö, Hamburg and Berlin, outbound train EuroNight 345 & train EuroNight 346 return. From late August 2026, RDC Deutschland will take over the service.
SnälltÃÂ¥get operates a seasonal night train between Stockholm, Malmo, Copenhagen, Hamburg and Berlin, outbound 301 & train 300 return. In 2024 it operates outbound daily except Saturday between 31 March and 1 November. On Fridays the journey is extended to Dresden. There are additional trips going to Dresden via Berlin on Wednesdays 27 November, 4 and 11 December. In each case the return journeys take place on the following day.
SnälltÃÂ¥get runs a seasonal night train from Malmö via Lund, Hässleholm, Alvesta, Nässjö, Linköping, Norrköping, Stockholm, and Uppsala, arriving the next morning in ÃÂstersund, UndersÃÂ¥ker, àre, Duved, Enafors, and Storlien, outbound train 3920 & train 3921 return, on Wednesday and Saturday evenings. The return journey takes place on Thursday and Sunday afternoons from the mountains. In 2024 this service is running between 19 June to 29 September 2024.
Night trains were launched in 1873 when sleeping facilities were provided by convertible compartments with the first sleeping cars appeared in 1885, initially in four wheel coaches, bogie wagons were introduced by Statens Järnvägar in 1891.
Third class sleepers were introduced in 1910 with the first examples appearing on the Stockholm to Gothenburg service. From this time the sleeping compartments were standardised so that first-class passengers had single berth compartments (although sometimes a second-class compartment would be marked as first class and would only be for solo occupancy), double-berths compartments for second-class and three berths, one above the other in third class.
In 1955 sleeping coaches were provided from Stockholm to 24 domestic destinations every night and over a million sleeping car passengers were conveyed.