A little over a year ago, controversy arose between autonomous communities. Abel Caballero, mayor of Vigo, claimed that one of the reasons why the AVE to Madrid did not take the promised time was due to “an excessive number of stops in the Castilla y León area.” The response was not long in coming. Now, the people of Vigo have their “direct” train to Madrid, without stops in this autonomous community.
The problem: they come out earlier and take longer than before.
215 minutes. That is the promise with which the railway link between Vigo and Madrid was announced. Yes, you read correctly: three hours and 35 minutes. Since high speed was launched in this corridor, the trains that have approached the promise that Óscar Puente put on the table in 2024 have been an exception.
Instead, the trains have taken at least four hours. In the best of cases, barely a minute has been cut from the journey, but in practice they continue to move on the psychological border of 240 minutes. As long as there is no delay. And in the Galician corridor they know well what we are talking about.
Too many stops. Given the impossibility of fulfilling that promise, Abel Caballero, mayor of Vigo, proposed a simple formula: that the trains not stop in Castilla y León. He did not say anything about Galicia because, in his opinion, it was the arrests in the neighboring autonomous community where the most time was wasted.
“The current travel time on some of the routes is very long due to an excessive number of stops in the area of Castilla y León, an area already close to Madrid that currently has a very important coverage of trains coming from all over the north and the rest of Galicia on high-speed routes”
The words were picked up in the local media Atlantic.net and, according to Caballero, they were well received by Álvaro Fernández Heredia, president of Renfe since where they quickly denied this possibility. The proposal collided head-on with Alfonso Fernández Mañueco, president of Castilla-León, who in words reported by The Spanish He described Caballero’s words as “intolerable.”

Vigo-Madrid route starting May 20
“Straight”. So, in quotes. Because starting May 20, Renfe will have an AVE without stops between Vigo and Madrid. The long-awaited Galician demand has been heard. As you see in the image above, from that day on the train from Vigo will leave at 5:50 a.m. and arrive in Madrid at 9:55 a.m.
Once it leaves Vigo, the train will stop only in Galician cities. Once we have passed Ourense, the train will not stop until it reaches the Chamartín station in Madrid. It is, finally, the “direct” AVE that the people of Vigo demanded to be able to travel back and forth to Madrid in the shortest time possible.

Vigo-Madrid route until May 19
Sure? And, contrary to what logic says, Vigo-Madrid takes longer than before. And, in addition, it will force passengers to get up earlier. And until that day, the first train that connects Vigo with the capital will continue to stop in Zamora but its journey will take eight minutes less. In addition, it leaves at 6:00 a.m., instead of 5:50 a.m.
The reason is that, with the reorganization devised by Renfe, the first train has to stop in Santiago de Compostela, which has been omitted until now. And the residents of Ourense do not see a great reduction in times either, since it will only take four minutes less to reach Madrid despite not stopping in the Castilian-Leonese city.
To make matters worse, the residents of Pontevedra will not find a substantial advantage either. In fact, they will now take eight minutes longer than before the last change. Now, with the latest changes, all trains leaving in Vigo and arriving in Madrid will take more than four hours.
Adif, in the spotlight. Part of these “delays”, they point out from Vigo Lighthouseare due to the works that are being carried out in the Guadarrama tunnel at the entrance to Madrid. These add seven minutes to the final amount but as they point out from The Region There are numerous temporary speed limitations on the Galician section that hinder the promises of connecting Vigo and Madrid in half an hour less.
He Vigo Lighthouse He also points out that Renfe has been complaining for some time about Adif’s management of the roads. According to the Galician media, the operator has requested on several occasions that some crossings between trains be relocated so that they are not on the single track sections. And the passage times have not been updated either, so, they point out, the current speed cannot be increased either.
An exception. Since the Galician high-speed corridor began to operate at full capacity thanks to the use of the Talgo Avril that can change track gauge, doubts about the reliability and performance of these trains have been on the table. First for its disastrous arrivalthen for their problems with the change of year in 2025 and finally due to the cracks that appeared in these trains on the Madrid-Barcelona.
However, the trains have proven capable of operating at full capacity and getting closer to the famous 215 minutes promised between Vigo and Madrid. Last November, A Renfe AVE managed to cover the journey in 217 minutes. The problem is that it only served to alleviate the delay accumulated at the origin. Being the last service and with the tracks already clear along the entire route, the Avril was able to travel at maximum speed for as long as possible.
Photo | André Marques
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