Service: normalStatusRoute plannerDEEN

Längenfeldgasse station

U4 · U6

lines
Yes
interchange
Yes
step-free (lift)
Intermediate
position

Längenfeldgasse station in detail

Längenfeldgasse station on the Vienna U-Bahn — U4 line

Längenfeldgasse is one of the 99 stations of the Vienna U-Bahn. As well as the U4, the U6 calls here — Längenfeldgasse is one of the ten interchange stations of the Vienna U-Bahn.

Changing lines costs nothing extra: your ticket covers the whole journey in one direction, even if you switch lines.

What is around Längenfeldgasse?

U4 / U6 interchange
0 min walk
The only direct interchange between the U4 and the U6 in the south of the city.
Meidlinger Hauptstraße
8 min walk
The shopping street of Meidling lies to the south, between the stations Meidling Hauptstraße and Bahnhof Meidling.
Wien river cycle path
3 min walk
The cycle path along the river Wien runs from here out to Hütteldorf or into the city centre.

Connections and interchanges

Tram («Bim»)
Wiener Linien run one of the largest tram networks in the world; the tram lines at street level complete the U-Bahn in the neighbourhood
Bus
City bus routes connect the residential streets around the station
NightLine buses
On the nights without 24-hour U-Bahn service (Sunday to Thursday) the NightLine bus routes (N lines) take over
Changes included
Switching between U-Bahn, tram, bus and S-Bahn inside the Vienna core zone is covered by the same ticket

Services at Längenfeldgasse

Step-free access
Lift to every platform, tactile guidance system and largely level boarding
Ticket machines
Wiener Linien ticket machines in the concourse, payment by card or cash
WienMobil app
Buy tickets digitally — digital tickets are around 5 % cheaper than printed ones
Passenger information
Digital displays with the waiting time to the next train and live service alerts
Safety
CCTV, emergency call points on the platform and security staff across the network
Bike parking
Many stations have bike racks or covered bicycle parking
Tip

U4 and U6 meet here: when you change, look for the terminus shown on the destination displays — in Vienna the direction is never given as «northbound» but always as the name of the last station on the line. And remember: changing is included in your ticket, you do not need a second one.

Frequently asked questions about Längenfeldgasse

As everywhere on the network, trains at Längenfeldgasse run from Monday to Thursday and on Sunday roughly from 05:00 – 00:30. On the nights from Friday to Saturday, from Saturday to Sunday and before public holidays the U-Bahn runs around the clock (24-hour service), then every 15 minutes. On all other nights the NightLine buses take over. The exact first and last departures per direction are listed under opening hours.

Längenfeldgasse is an interchange station on the Vienna U-Bahn: the lines U4 and U6 call here. You change inside the station, and the change is included in your ticket — you never pay extra to switch line. You can work out any connection with the route planner.

You barely need a timetable in Vienna: at peak times trains run every 2–5 minutes, about every 5 minutes during the day, roughly every 7–8 minutes in the evening and every 15 minutes on the through-the-night services. You simply walk down to the platform — the next train is coming. The station is step-free, too: every station on the Vienna U-Bahn has a lift, including the historic ones on the U4 and the U6, which were retrofitted. Individual lifts can be out of service for maintenance.

Wiener Linien use a single flat fare for the Vienna core zone: a single ticket costs €3.20 (€3.00 if you buy it digitally in the WienMobil app or the online shop) and is valid for one journey in one direction, including any changes between U-Bahn, tram, bus and S-Bahn inside the core zone — changing line never costs extra. Visitors usually do best with the 24-hour ticket at €10.20; for longer stays there is the 31-day ticket at €75.00 or the annual pass at €467.00 (€461.00 digital). Vienna has no pay-as-you-go stored-value card — there is nothing like an Oyster card here. All the options are listed under tickets & prices and annual pass. Your ticket must be valid before you board: if an inspector finds you without one, the penalty fare is €135.

Bicycles are allowed on the U-Bahn in principle, but not during the rush hour and only with a separate bicycle ticket. The permitted time windows and the price are set by Wiener Linien and are adjusted from time to time — check the current rules on wienerlinien.at before you travel. Folding bikes count as luggage and can be carried free of charge at any time when folded. Bicycles are not allowed on buses or trams.

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