Lisbon-Évora Intercidades run with regional trains: CP admits rolling-stock shortage
Portugal's CP railway is replacing Intercidades trains with regional units on the Lisbon-Évora line for lack of rolling stock. The government admits the limitation and only promises relief in 2027.
Buy an Intercidades ticket between Lisbon and Évora these days and, on many departures, you will be travelling on something else entirely: CP is swapping the usual intercity sets for trains borrowed from regional lines because it simply does not have enough rolling stock. You pay for the fast, comfortable service — you ride in carriages built for short hops with frequent stops.
Why is CP using regional trains on the Évora line?
The short answer: there are not enough carriages to go around. The Intercidades fleet is ageing, and CP itself acknowledges that some series of rolling stock have age-related limitations — from comfort to air conditioning, no small thing in the extreme-heat weeks Portugal is going through. Service alerts and changes are published on CP’s official website. Alentejo passengers had already been stacking up complaints about delays and breakdowns since spring, and the train swap was the last straw: social media is full of accounts of Intercidades-priced journeys made on regional seats.
When will the service improve?
The government has admitted the Lisbon-Évora limitation, blaming reduced carriage availability, and only expects a better response in 2027, when new rolling stock already on order enters service. Until then, CP says the regional stopgap is what keeps trains from being cancelled outright.
For now, the Alentejo summer runs slower and less comfortably — in a month when fuel prices also went up, so driving instead offers no mercy to the wallet either. Évora, European Capital of Culture in 2027, had better brace: the new trains and the visitors look set to arrive at the same time.
Image: Giugiaro / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)