Industry

Air France and SNCF Voyageurs celebrate 30 years of partnership

In 2025, Air France and SNCF Voyageurs are celebrating 30 years of partnership. True to this spirit, the two companies are allowing members of Flying Blue to convert their Miles into electronic vouchers that can be used on the TGV INOUI network.

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As a world first, members of Flying Blue, the Air France-KLM loyalty programme, can now convert their Miles into SNCF Voyageurs vouchers online on the Flying Blue Store. These vouchers, for an amount of the customer’s choice (between 25 and 100 euros), can be used on the entire TGV INOUI network for bookings made via SNCF Voyageurs-approved ticket offices that accept them and SNCF Voyageurs direct sales channels.

Flying Blue, the Air France-KLM loyalty programme, allows customers to earn Miles when travelling with Air France, KLM or Transavia, and when making purchases from partner stores. These miles can be used to purchase air tickets (award tickets), to contribute to the development of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), to make donations to charities, and now to buy SNCF Voyageurs travel vouchers.


30 years of partnership

For three decades, Air France and SNCF Voyageurs have been working hand in hand to offer the ‘Train+Air’ combined travel service (formerly TGV Air). This service has been considerably extended in recent years and is now available on 41 routes to and from Paris-Charles de Gaulle and Paris-Orly airports, compared with 28 in 2022 – an increase of almost 50% in just three years. This means that 22 train stations in France are now directly linked to the Paris airports, with a fully digital service that allows you to combine train journeys and flights in a single booking and the guarantee, in the event of irregularity, of assistance and a seat on the next flight or train at no additional cost.

Since 2019, more than 600,000 bookings have been made via the ‘Train+Air’ service by Air France customers, underlining the growing interest of travellers in combined journeys and customers’ desire to reduce their travel footprint whenever they can. In 2024, the most popular routes were Lyon, Lille and Strasbourg, with customers then connecting to flights mainly to North America and the West Indies.