Swebus Express

Swebus (Swebus Express AB)

A Scania OmniExpress in new Swebus livery in 2010.
Parent Nobina
Commenced operation 21 April 1997
Headquarters Solna, Stockholm
Service area Sweden
Service type Intercity coach service
Destinations 150
Operator Swebus Express AB
Website www.swebus.se
MAN Lion's Top Coach in old Swebus Express livery in Jönköping in March 2007.

Swebus Express AB, trading as just Swebus since 2009, is one of Sweden's largest long distance coach operators. Swebus has a "seat guarantee" for journeys bought at least 24 hours before departure, meaning that they promise to bring in the necessary extra coaches in case of extensive booking on a departure.

Swebus Express' lines are focused in southern Sweden, with Uppsala and Stockholm in the north, Norrköping, Linköping and Kalmar on the east coast. Malmö and Blekinge in the south and Helsingborg, Halmstad and Gothenburg on the west coast and Jönköping in the middle, and some lines extended to Oslo in Norway and Copenhagen in Denmark. They also offer tickets to Germany via Eurolines and the Czech Republic via Bohemian Lines.

History

After Swebus had been acquired by Stagecoach in October 1996, Swebus' long distance routes became branded as Swebus Express from 21 April 1997.[1] In the beginning they had the same livery as Stagecoach, just with a different logo.[2] A large marketing campaign between April and August, which included free return tickets, led to some routes quintuple their passenger rates in the period. This again led to Swebus ordering 65 14.7-metres coaches to be bodied by Van Hool on Volvo B10M-70B chassis and two Neoplan Megaliner.[3]

At 1 January 1999 the long-distance coach market in Sweden was deregulated, which led to several new Swebus Express routes, including Stockholm - Uppsala - Gävle, Växjö - Jönköping, Västervik - Jönköping, Växjö - Malmö and Kalmar - Karlskrona - Hässleholm - Helsingborg from 25 January 1999.[4]

After Swebus was sold to Concordia Bus in late 1999, the orange stripe from the Stagecoach livery was removed and later the blue and red stripes were softened at the "Z" section. In 2001/2002, Swebus Express was made into a separate operating company, named Swebus Express AB.

When Swebus AB was renamed Nobina Sverige AB in December 2009, Swebus Express started trading as just Swebus, and also got a new logo and an all-white livery.

Routes

Current routes (Updated May 2015)

Some routes are season-specific.[5]

Number Route Notes and history
801 Göteborg-Mariestad-Örebro
820 Köpenhamn-Kastrup-Malmö-Göteborg-Oslo
  • Formerly also known as E6-Expressen.
830 Uppsala-Arlanda-Stockholm-Jönköping-Landvetter-Göteborg
832 Uppsala-Stockholm-Jönköping-Malmö
835 Uppsala-Stockholm-Kalmar-(Öland)
844 Linköping-Norrköping-Örebro
  • Formerly also served Jönköping.
857 Västervik-Jönköping
866 Örebro-Västerås-Enköping-Arlanda
  • Airport transfer.
888 Stockholm-Örebro-Karlstad-Oslo
  • Former line 845.
899 Stockholm-Uppsala

Partner routes

Number Route Notes and history
901
902
Copenhagen-Berlin/Hamburg
920 Stockholm-Malmö-Prague-Brno
  • Operated by Bohemian Lines.
940 Stockholm-Östersund/Funäsdalen
  • Operated by Härjedalingen.
950 Stockholm-Umeå/Sollefteå
  • Operated by Ybuss.
991 Stockholm-Borlänge-Mora
  • Operated by Jensen Buss.

Former routes

This list is not complete.[6]

Number Route Notes and history
800 Göteborg-Karlstad-Falun-Gävle
831
777
Göteborg-Jönköping-Linköping-Stockholm
833 Stockholm-Jönköping-Malmö
838 Örebro-Karlsborg-Skövde-Uddevalla
839 Jönköping-Skövde-Mariestad-Karlstad
840 Örebro-Motala-Jönköping
842 Örebro-Eskilstuna-Stockholm
843 Örebro-Karlskoga-Kristinehamn-Karlstad
846 Stockholm-Enköping-Västerås
849 Köpenhamn-Malmö-Göteborg
  • Now part of line 820.
855 Skänninge-Vadstena-Motala-Stockholm
856 Uppsala-Västerås-Örebro
862 Halmstad-Jönköping
865 Uddevala-Mariestad-Örebro
874 Uppsala-Västerås-Örebro
890 Mora-Borlänge-Falun-Stockholm
892 Stockholm-Uppsala-Falun-Borlänge
897 Gävle-Uppsala-Stockholm

References

  1. "Årsredovisning 1/1 1996 — 30/4 1997" [Annual Report] (in Swedish). Swebus AB. 1997. Archived from the original on 1997-10-15. Retrieved 2015-05-19.
  2. "Två Swebus Express-vagnar som numera är historia" [Two Swebus Express coaches that are now history]. Bussnack (in Swedish). 2009-12-01. Retrieved 2015-05-19.
  3. "Årsredovisning 1/5 1997 — 30/4 1998" [Annual Report] (in Swedish). Swebus AB. 1998. Archived from the original on 1999-02-02. Retrieved 2015-05-19.
  4. "Årsredovisning 1/5 1998 — 30/4 1999" [Annual Report] (PDF) (in Swedish). Swebus AB. 1999. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2000-09-18. Retrieved 2015-05-19.
  5. "Tidtabeller" [Timetables] (in Swedish). Swebus Express. Retrieved 2015-05-19.
  6. "Tidtabeller" [Timetables] (in Swedish). Swebus Express. 2000-08-14. Archived from the original on 2000-09-19. Retrieved 2015-05-19.
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