New rail link to Andalusia Towards the end of the 1980s a new line was planned to join the
Meseta Central with
Andalusia without passing through the
Despeñaperros pass. After considering various options it was decided that a
standard-gauge line, allowing for Spain's first high-speed rail link, would be built. The project was named NAFA (
Nuevo Acceso Ferroviario a Andalucía, New Rail Link to Andalusia) and was meant to help revitalise the stagnant southern Spanish economy. The line was inaugurated on 14 April 1992 to coincide with
Expo 92 being held in Seville. Seven days later, on 21 April 1992 commercial
AVE service began with six daily services stopping at
Madrid,
Seville,
Córdoba,
Puertollano and
Ciudad Real. In October 1992 Renfe began the AVE Lanzadera (Shuttle), a high-speed medium-distance service between Madrid, Ciudad Real and Puertollano, using spare
class 100 trains. It has been suggested that the
PSOE government chose the French
Alstom bid over the
Siemens and
Talgo bids for political rather than technical reasons, rewarding the French government for its assistance in capturing
ETA activists who took
sanctuary across the border in southern France. Seville's hosting of the
1992 World's Fair prompted the choice of that city for the inauguration of the first high-speed line, with its being the home town of then Spanish prime minister
Felipe González also playing some role. Seville was the artistic, cultural, and financial capital of southern Spain and the fourth largest city in Spain, after Madrid,
Barcelona and
Valencia, with a population of over 700,000 and a metropolitan area of almost 1.5 million people. It is also the capital of Andalusia, Spain's most populous
autonomous community (region). In January 1993 the
Talgo 200 Madrid–Málaga service began, using high-speed lines as far as Córdoba and then the
Córdoba–Málaga Spanish-gauge conventional track to reach
Málaga. On 23 April that year, an AVE trainset set a new top speed of on a test run. Later in 1993 the mixed-method services
Talgo 200 Madrid–Cádiz and
Talgo 200 Madrid–Huelva began. In 1994 AVE trains on the Madrid–Seville line began to run at 300 km/h, cutting journey times by at least 40 minutes and covering the 471 km in hours, though it is unlikely that much of a saving came from the increase in maximum speed, because only a small section of the line near Los Yébenes has the alignments for 300 km/h operation. The maximum permitted speed is 270 km/h between Atocha station and Brazatortas, save for the approaches to the intermediate stations (Atocha, Ciudad Real and Puertollano). Beyond Brazatortas, the line is only authorised for 250 km/h operation, which drops to 215 km/h in the Sierra Morena mountains and 90 km/h around Córdoba station. It is more likely that time savings occurred as a result of there being fewer intermediate stops. Although Renfe began a mixed-service
Talgo 200 Madrid–Algeciras route in 1999, this was, along with the other mixed services, transferred to
Grandes Líneas Renfe (Renfe's Spanish gauge long-distance brand) following changes to plans for high-speed rail in Spain. In November 2003 a new
AVE Lanzadera medium distance service began between Seville and Córdoba using new
class 104 trains, reducing journey times between the two cities to 40 minutes. In 2005 the brand was renamed
RENFE Avant, and all those services started to use class 104 trains, leaving
class 100 for the AVE services. The construction of a stretch of high-speed line from Madrid to
Toledo allowed the inauguration of a medium-distance service in November 2005. The journey time between the two cities is now less than 30 minutes. The high-speed link, combined with high property prices in Madrid, has encouraged many Madrid commuters to settle in
Ciudad Real, the first stop on the Madrid–Seville line. There has, however, been controversy over the construction of this line as the change to standard-gauge track meant that towns such as
Getafe,
Aranjuez and
Algodor, which now have no commercial services, lost their direct services to Toledo. Furthermore, since Toledo is now connected by standard-gauge track it is impossible for other passenger or goods trains to reach it that have not come from other high-speed lines. The last segment of the
Madrid–Málaga high-speed rail line was completed on 23 December 2007 when the new high-speed railway section between the cities of Córdoba and Málaga was inaugurated. It is a standard-gauge railway line of 155 km in length and is designed for speeds of 350 km/h (217 mph). It has compatibility with neighboring countries' railway systems as well. The fastest AVE service between Madrid and Málaga takes 2 hours and 20 minutes. In February 2008 new long-distance AVE services were introduced on the Seville−Barcelona and Málaga−Barcelona routes, as well as a new Avant service on the Málaga−Córdoba−Seville route. In October 2015 an extension of the Madrid-Seville high-speed rail line to
Cádiz was completed after 14 years of works and put in service by
Alvia trains for speeds up to 200 km/h. This section is built on
Iberian gauge track that if
European Rail Traffic Management System (ERTMS) railway signaling is installed in the line, with fewer stops between Seville and Cádiz, the maximum speed for the trains can be raised up to 250 km/h. In 2019 the
Antequera–Granada high-speed rail line opened at a total cost of €1.4 billion.
Madrid–Barcelona The Madrid–
Zaragoza–
Barcelona line was inaugurated on 20 February 2008, after parts of the line had operated since 2003 (Madrid–Zaragoza–Lleida) and 2006 (Lleida–Tarragona). This line is currently one of the world's fastest long-distance trains in commercial operation, The
Sants–La Sagrera tunnel was finally inaugurated on 8 January 2013 along with the
Perpignan–Barcelona high-speed rail line while commercial services via the tunnel towards France begun on the following day. Construction works at the station were finally resumed in 2018 and the new AVE station is now expected to open to services by the end of 2026, although AVE trains have been passing through the station since the end of 2024.
Northern corridors The first installment of a
high-speed rail corridor in the north and north-west of Spain was the 179.6 km section Madrid–
Segovia–
Valladolid which was put in operation on 22 December 2007. It includes a tunnel of at
Guadarrama, which is the
fourth longest train tunnel in Europe. Valladolid will become the hub for all AVE services connecting the north and north-west of Spain with the rest of the country. Construction of the extension of the line towards the region of
Asturias started in 2009 (except for
Pajares Base Tunnel (variante de pajares) which started in 2003) and reached the city of
Leon in 2015 with the inauguration of the 162.7 km
Valladolid–
Venta de Baños–Leon section on 29 September 2015. On 29 November 2023 the section Leon-
La Robla-
Pola de Lena was inaugurated after 20 years of works. On 21 May 2024 Renfe replaced the Madrid–Gijón and Castellón/
Vinaros–Gijón Alvia services by AVE services on the first AVE gauge-changing
Class 106 trains, able to operate at a max speed of with reduced journey times by 12 minutes between Madrid and Oviedo, and by 10 minutes between Madrid and Gijón. On 24 April 2010, it was announced a 55 km high-speed spur would leave the Madrid–Valladolid route at Segovia and continue to
Ávila. Initial plans were expected to be complete by the end of 2010, but as of 2024 this line remains in planning. On 21 July 2022 a new 86.5 km section between Venta de Baños and
Burgos was inaugurated after 13 years of works at an investment cost of 759 million euros and introduced a new AVE Madrid-Burgos service that cuts the journey time between the two cities down to just over an hour and a half. This section is the first expansion of the high-speed network to the north-northeast towards the Spanish region of the
Basque Country and the future
Basque high-speed railway line (Basque Y). It includes 2 tunnels and 12
viaducts; the longest of them passes over the
Pisuerga river and
Autovía A-62 highway. In the north-west of Spain, the
Madrid–Galicia high-speed rail line was completed on 21 December 2021 after 20 years of works when the
Olmedo–
Zamora–
Santiago de Compostela section was finished. This line is connected to the
Madrid–Asturias high-speed rail line at Olmedo south of
Valladolid. It was put in service along with the Santiago de Compostela–
A Coruña section that was inaugurated in parallel. Since December 2011 the
Avant service operates on the route Ourense–Santiago de Compostela–A Coruña by using
S-121 trains and this is the first high-speed service offered by Renfe in the region of
Galicia. The 107 km southern section, between Olmedo (130 km north of Madrid on the Madrid–Asturias line) and Zamora entered revenue service on 17 December 2015 by
Alvia trains. The 110 km new built section in the middle between Zamora and Otero de Sanabria near the town of
Puebla de Sanabria was put in service on 26 October 2020, while the 119.4 km last remaining part between Puebla de Sanabria and Ourense which crosses some of Spain's most remote and fragile nature areas, was completed in end 2021. Up to that date the entire line was served by
Alvia S-730 (
Patito, max speed ) trains. This line is linked in the region of Galicia to the 156 km
Atlantic Axis high-speed rail line that connects the cities of
Vigo and A Coruña via Santiago de Compostela. It is a new built Iberian gauge high-speed line designed for speeds up to 250 km/h and is due to be converted to standard gauge in the future. The Atlantic Axis was inaugurated in April 2015 while the section A Coruña–Santiago de Compostela opened in 2009 and was electrified in 2011. The new railway shortened the distance between the two cities by 22 km, from 178 km to 156 km, and cut the travel time from around 3 hours on the old railway down to 1 hour and 20 minutes on the new one. 37 tunnels totalling 59 km and 34 bridges totalling 15 km form part of the rebuilt railway. Since 21 May 2024 AVE Madrid–Vigo and Madrid–La Coruña services on gauge-changing Class 106 trains are offered with reduced journey times by 18 minutes between Madrid and Santiago de Compostela and by 16 minutes between Madrid and Vigo compared to the previously Alvia services. In June 2025, monthly rail transport between Galicia and Madrid surpassed air transport in passenger numbers for the first time (181,588 passengers by train versus 155,715 by plane, compared to 20,000 versus 180,000 respectively in 2011).
Eastern corridors The Madrid–Levante network connects Madrid with the Mediterranean coast of the
Levante Region (Eastern Spain). The Madrid–
Cuenca–
Valencia line was officially finished on Friday, 10 December 2010, with commercial trips starting on Saturday 18 December 2010. Five days later, on 15 December 2010, the inauguration of the Cuenca–
Albacete branch took place. Those two lines form the first sections of the
Madrid–Levante high-speed rail network. Since then non-stop
AVE trains between Madrid and Valencia cover the in 1 hour 38 minutes. In June 2011,
Renfe announced they would suppress the three daily high-speed trains between
Toledo, Cuenca and Albacete because of lack of passengers despite an investment of 3.5 billion euros (this figure includes the full Madrid–Levante railway network construction costs, with its later extensions to
Alicante and
Murcia). Some media stated that the average number of daily passengers was 9 between Toledo and Albacete and 6 between Toledo and Cuenca while the daily cost was 18,000 euros, while official figures gave us an average of 403–464 daily passengers. Those trains ran over existing high speed lines (the lines to Toledo, Seville and Valencia) and so services to those cities remain open, but passengers traveling between Toledo and other destinations had to change trains at Madrid. However, in 2022, as the Madrid–Cuenca–Valencia conventional railway was closed, direct high-speed trains between Toledo, Cuenca and Albacete have been reinstated, this time operated as
Avant services, catering better to the needs of passengers than the AVE trains that operated since 2011. The Madrid–Albacete–Alicante line was inaugurated on 18 June 2013. Trains cover the distance between Madrid and Alicante in 2 hours 12 minutes. In the same year the Avant service between
Requena-Utiel and Valencia was introduced. On 22 January 2018 the extension section of the line to
Castellón was inaugurated, introducing a new AVE service, Madrid-Castellón, which cut the journey time between the two cities by an additional 30 minutes for a total of 2 hours and 25 minutes. The first stretch of the AVE service from Madrid to Murcia was inaugurated on 1 February 2021, linking
Monforte del Cid,
Elche and
Orihuela, while the continuation up to Murcia put in service on 20 December 2022.
International connection with France An important milestone for the Spanish high-speed network was reached in December 2013 when it was connected to the rest of Europe via France. The connecting link was the construction of the
Barcelona–
Figueres section of the
Perpignan–Barcelona high-speed line, an extension of the
Madrid–Barcelona line, completed in January 2013 at a cost of €3.7 billion. The international
Perpignan–Figueres section of the line opened in December 2010 and includes the new
Perthus Tunnel under the
Pyrenees. The high-speed Barcelona–Figueres section (from Barcelona to the French border) was officially inaugurated on 7 January 2013. Since then
AVE services connect
Madrid directly to
Girona and Figueres via Barcelona and
Avant services are offered on the Barcelona–Girona–Figueres route. One previously non-
high-speed section on the French side, between
Montpellier and
Nîmes, opened in July 2018, allowing almost continuous high-speed travel from the
French high-speed network to the Spanish one. The French government, on the other hand, later announced indefinite delays to the
Montpellier-Perpignan high speed section that was originally planned for 2020.
Madrid interconnector On 24 April 2010, tunnelling started on the 7.3 km route connecting the 2 main stations in Madrid,
Madrid Atocha and
Madrid Chamartín. A later announcement postponed the opening for the second half of 2020. However, delays in the schedule due to the
COVID-19 pandemic postponed it further. In November 2021, the inauguration of the interconnector was projected to the first trimester of 2022. Test runs were being conducted in early February 2022, and the line was expected to be ready for permit application in early March. The tunnel finally opened on July 1, 2022. Before this all trains going towards
Valladolid left from Chamartín and trains going to
Seville,
Málaga,
Valencia,
Alicante and
Barcelona left from Atocha station. Also, there is a single daily service in each direction running along the Barcelona–Seville, Barcelona–Málaga, and Barcelona-Granada routes, which uses the high-speed bypass around
Madrid to avoid reversing the direction of train in Atocha station. The tunnel now allows services serving northern cities to travel non-stop or with a stop through Madrid and onward to southern cities (or vice versa), without the driver having to change ends or bypass Madrid, a valuable source of passengers. Previously someone wanting to travel from Valladolid to Alicante, for instance, had to travel from
Valladolid Campo Grande station to Madrid Chamartín station before taking a
Cercanías service to Atocha; then finally taking an onward train to Alicante.
Incidents and accidents •
Santiago de Compostela derailment •
Euromed 2002 accident •
2026 Adamuz train derailments == Operational services ==