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Spanish Train Station Roleplay

Welcome to our travel conversation game. In this scenario, you will practice a dialogue between a ticket agent and a traveler. Test your ability to buy tickets, ask for platform numbers, and check train times in Spanish.

↻ Click to translate

En la Estación de Tren

Bienvenido a nuestro juego de conversación de viajes. En este escenario, practicarás un diálogo entre un vendedor de boletos y un viajero. Pon a prueba tu capacidad para comprar boletos, preguntar por el andén y consultar los horarios.

↻ Clicca per girare

The ticket agent says:

Your goal (English):


Select the correct Spanish response:

Buying a Ticket at a Spanish Train Station: Lesson Guide

Whether you are taking the high-speed AVE train or a regional network, buying a ticket at the *estación de tren* (train station) is an essential skill in Spain. This roleplay prepares you to speak with the ticket clerk, handle payments, and find your platform.

Language & Cultural Tips

In Spanish, a one-way ticket is called "solo ida" and a round-trip is "ida y vuelta". The platform is referred to as "el andén". Notice that the clerk says "¿Dígame?" (literally: "tell me"); this is an extremely common, fast way for service workers in Spain to say "Can I help you?" or "Next!".

Key Vocabulary
Spanish Phrase English Translation
¿Dígame?Can I help you?
Un billete a MilánOne ticket to Milan
Solo idaOne way
Ida y vueltaReturn / Round trip
¿De qué andén sale?Which platform does it leave from?
¡Buen viaje!Have a nice trip!
Full Conversation Transcript

Review the full dialogue from the game below to study the sentence structures and vocabulary in context.

Clerk: Buenos días. ¿Dígame?
(Good morning. Can I help you?)
Customer: Buenos días, un billete a Milán, por favor.
(Good morning, one ticket to Milan, please.)
Clerk: ¿Solo ida o ida y vuelta?
(One way or return?)
Customer: Solo ida. ¿Cuánto cuesta?
(One way. How much is it?)
Clerk: Son veinte euros. Sale en diez minutos.
(It is twenty euros. Leaves in ten minutes.)
Customer: Está bien. ¿De qué andén sale?
(Alright. Which platform does it leave from?)
Clerk: Del andén cinco.
(From platform five.)
Customer: Gracias. Aquí tiene el dinero.
(Thanks. Here is the money.)
Clerk: Aquí tiene su billete. ¡Buen viaje!
(Here is your ticket. Have a nice trip!)
Customer: Gracias, adiós.
(Thank you, goodbye.)