Lagging behind in Europe: Every third Hungarian train ran late in 2024, data shows

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Despite bold promises from Hungary’s transport minister, János Lázár, railway punctuality continues to deteriorate. Last year, nearly one in three trains operated by MÁV (Hungarian State Railways) arrived late — a significant drop from 2019, when only one in ten was delayed. By the final quarter of 2024, almost two-thirds of all trains missed their scheduled arrival times.

Delays now harder to track at MÁV

While MÁV has announced new compensation rules — including partial refunds for delays over 20 minutes and discounts for monthly pass holders with multiple delays — many see these as reactive measures rather than systemic improvements.

According to G7, critics argue that MÁV has changed how it reports delays, making them harder to track. Last September, the company stopped publishing transparent statistics and introduced a more opaque reporting method. Meanwhile, Hungary’s Central Statistical Office refused to release delay data, citing data protection concerns.

More delays instead of long delays, old trains

According to internal figures, MÁV vehicles accumulated 3.7 million minutes of delays in 2024 — more than double the 1.9 million minutes logged in 2019. While the number of delayed trains increased, the average delay time has decreased slightly, suggesting a shift in strategy to avoid triggering compensation for long delays.

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