Am I eligible for the Eurail Youth pass? I am 27.5 years old
I will be 27 years and 5 months old this June, when I'll take the first train. Will I be eligible for the EU rail Youth pass?
It shows 12-27 years old for Youth, and 28+ for the Adult. I think I fall in between 27 and 28.
Which one should I get?
eurail
New contributor
add a comment |
I will be 27 years and 5 months old this June, when I'll take the first train. Will I be eligible for the EU rail Youth pass?
It shows 12-27 years old for Youth, and 28+ for the Adult. I think I fall in between 27 and 28.
Which one should I get?
eurail
New contributor
If the drinking age is 18, do you think you'd be able to buy alcohol if you're between 17 and 18?
– Dmitry Grigoryev
yesterday
@DmitryGrigoryev I understand your point. But, there's a clear line in your example, anything below 18 is not eligible, anything above is eligible. If you check here, it's not clearly given what happens to people between 27 and 28.
– Parthapratim Neog
yesterday
2
You cannot be "between" 27 and 28 years old in this context. When laws or regulations decree that a certain age, in years, provides, or removes, an entitlement or obligation, you reach that age on the appropriate birthday, and you keep that age until your next birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
add a comment |
I will be 27 years and 5 months old this June, when I'll take the first train. Will I be eligible for the EU rail Youth pass?
It shows 12-27 years old for Youth, and 28+ for the Adult. I think I fall in between 27 and 28.
Which one should I get?
eurail
New contributor
I will be 27 years and 5 months old this June, when I'll take the first train. Will I be eligible for the EU rail Youth pass?
It shows 12-27 years old for Youth, and 28+ for the Adult. I think I fall in between 27 and 28.
Which one should I get?
eurail
eurail
New contributor
New contributor
edited yesterday
Parthapratim Neog
New contributor
asked 2 days ago
Parthapratim NeogParthapratim Neog
1436
1436
New contributor
New contributor
If the drinking age is 18, do you think you'd be able to buy alcohol if you're between 17 and 18?
– Dmitry Grigoryev
yesterday
@DmitryGrigoryev I understand your point. But, there's a clear line in your example, anything below 18 is not eligible, anything above is eligible. If you check here, it's not clearly given what happens to people between 27 and 28.
– Parthapratim Neog
yesterday
2
You cannot be "between" 27 and 28 years old in this context. When laws or regulations decree that a certain age, in years, provides, or removes, an entitlement or obligation, you reach that age on the appropriate birthday, and you keep that age until your next birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
add a comment |
If the drinking age is 18, do you think you'd be able to buy alcohol if you're between 17 and 18?
– Dmitry Grigoryev
yesterday
@DmitryGrigoryev I understand your point. But, there's a clear line in your example, anything below 18 is not eligible, anything above is eligible. If you check here, it's not clearly given what happens to people between 27 and 28.
– Parthapratim Neog
yesterday
2
You cannot be "between" 27 and 28 years old in this context. When laws or regulations decree that a certain age, in years, provides, or removes, an entitlement or obligation, you reach that age on the appropriate birthday, and you keep that age until your next birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
If the drinking age is 18, do you think you'd be able to buy alcohol if you're between 17 and 18?
– Dmitry Grigoryev
yesterday
If the drinking age is 18, do you think you'd be able to buy alcohol if you're between 17 and 18?
– Dmitry Grigoryev
yesterday
@DmitryGrigoryev I understand your point. But, there's a clear line in your example, anything below 18 is not eligible, anything above is eligible. If you check here, it's not clearly given what happens to people between 27 and 28.
– Parthapratim Neog
yesterday
@DmitryGrigoryev I understand your point. But, there's a clear line in your example, anything below 18 is not eligible, anything above is eligible. If you check here, it's not clearly given what happens to people between 27 and 28.
– Parthapratim Neog
yesterday
2
2
You cannot be "between" 27 and 28 years old in this context. When laws or regulations decree that a certain age, in years, provides, or removes, an entitlement or obligation, you reach that age on the appropriate birthday, and you keep that age until your next birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
You cannot be "between" 27 and 28 years old in this context. When laws or regulations decree that a certain age, in years, provides, or removes, an entitlement or obligation, you reach that age on the appropriate birthday, and you keep that age until your next birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
add a comment |
1 Answer
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In Western countries, ages for eligibility purposes are reckoned in whole years. You became "27 years old" on your 27th birthday, and you will remain so up to, and including, the day before your 28th birthday. Travellers who, on their first day of travel, have reached their 12th birthday, and have not reached their 28th birthday, are eligible for the Eurail Youth Pass. Even if they have their 28th birthday during travel, the pass remains valid.
To travel with a
discounted Youth Pass, you must be aged from 12 up to and including 27
on the start date of the Eurail Pass.
Conditions of this Eurail pass
The linked page doesn't say anything about birthdays. Without additional sources I would be cautious with this. The full T&C is mum on this as well.
– chx
yesterday
1
If you are 27 and 5 months you are "27". Unambiguously.
– Mark Perryman
yesterday
2
@chx - "A Youth Pass can only be used by travelers who are younger than 28 years of age on the first day that the Pass is valid." You become 28 years old at 12 midnight immediately preceding your 28th birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
3
@chx It's not a matter of a particular set of T&C because "everybody knows" how to reckon ages -- namely as a whole number of years, rounding down. Children learn this without even being taught, if they grow up in the west. The OP may not know this, if he's from a culture that handles birthdays and ages differently - or if he knows that some cultures do it differently and is unsure if Europe is one of those - but that doesn't mean a particular company's documents would spell out things that "everybody knows".
– Henning Makholm
17 hours ago
No, everyone knows doesn't matter. The law does. law.stackexchange.com/q/38255/6859
– chx
9 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
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In Western countries, ages for eligibility purposes are reckoned in whole years. You became "27 years old" on your 27th birthday, and you will remain so up to, and including, the day before your 28th birthday. Travellers who, on their first day of travel, have reached their 12th birthday, and have not reached their 28th birthday, are eligible for the Eurail Youth Pass. Even if they have their 28th birthday during travel, the pass remains valid.
To travel with a
discounted Youth Pass, you must be aged from 12 up to and including 27
on the start date of the Eurail Pass.
Conditions of this Eurail pass
The linked page doesn't say anything about birthdays. Without additional sources I would be cautious with this. The full T&C is mum on this as well.
– chx
yesterday
1
If you are 27 and 5 months you are "27". Unambiguously.
– Mark Perryman
yesterday
2
@chx - "A Youth Pass can only be used by travelers who are younger than 28 years of age on the first day that the Pass is valid." You become 28 years old at 12 midnight immediately preceding your 28th birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
3
@chx It's not a matter of a particular set of T&C because "everybody knows" how to reckon ages -- namely as a whole number of years, rounding down. Children learn this without even being taught, if they grow up in the west. The OP may not know this, if he's from a culture that handles birthdays and ages differently - or if he knows that some cultures do it differently and is unsure if Europe is one of those - but that doesn't mean a particular company's documents would spell out things that "everybody knows".
– Henning Makholm
17 hours ago
No, everyone knows doesn't matter. The law does. law.stackexchange.com/q/38255/6859
– chx
9 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
In Western countries, ages for eligibility purposes are reckoned in whole years. You became "27 years old" on your 27th birthday, and you will remain so up to, and including, the day before your 28th birthday. Travellers who, on their first day of travel, have reached their 12th birthday, and have not reached their 28th birthday, are eligible for the Eurail Youth Pass. Even if they have their 28th birthday during travel, the pass remains valid.
To travel with a
discounted Youth Pass, you must be aged from 12 up to and including 27
on the start date of the Eurail Pass.
Conditions of this Eurail pass
The linked page doesn't say anything about birthdays. Without additional sources I would be cautious with this. The full T&C is mum on this as well.
– chx
yesterday
1
If you are 27 and 5 months you are "27". Unambiguously.
– Mark Perryman
yesterday
2
@chx - "A Youth Pass can only be used by travelers who are younger than 28 years of age on the first day that the Pass is valid." You become 28 years old at 12 midnight immediately preceding your 28th birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
3
@chx It's not a matter of a particular set of T&C because "everybody knows" how to reckon ages -- namely as a whole number of years, rounding down. Children learn this without even being taught, if they grow up in the west. The OP may not know this, if he's from a culture that handles birthdays and ages differently - or if he knows that some cultures do it differently and is unsure if Europe is one of those - but that doesn't mean a particular company's documents would spell out things that "everybody knows".
– Henning Makholm
17 hours ago
No, everyone knows doesn't matter. The law does. law.stackexchange.com/q/38255/6859
– chx
9 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
In Western countries, ages for eligibility purposes are reckoned in whole years. You became "27 years old" on your 27th birthday, and you will remain so up to, and including, the day before your 28th birthday. Travellers who, on their first day of travel, have reached their 12th birthday, and have not reached their 28th birthday, are eligible for the Eurail Youth Pass. Even if they have their 28th birthday during travel, the pass remains valid.
To travel with a
discounted Youth Pass, you must be aged from 12 up to and including 27
on the start date of the Eurail Pass.
Conditions of this Eurail pass
In Western countries, ages for eligibility purposes are reckoned in whole years. You became "27 years old" on your 27th birthday, and you will remain so up to, and including, the day before your 28th birthday. Travellers who, on their first day of travel, have reached their 12th birthday, and have not reached their 28th birthday, are eligible for the Eurail Youth Pass. Even if they have their 28th birthday during travel, the pass remains valid.
To travel with a
discounted Youth Pass, you must be aged from 12 up to and including 27
on the start date of the Eurail Pass.
Conditions of this Eurail pass
edited 16 hours ago
answered 2 days ago
Michael HarveyMichael Harvey
36617
36617
The linked page doesn't say anything about birthdays. Without additional sources I would be cautious with this. The full T&C is mum on this as well.
– chx
yesterday
1
If you are 27 and 5 months you are "27". Unambiguously.
– Mark Perryman
yesterday
2
@chx - "A Youth Pass can only be used by travelers who are younger than 28 years of age on the first day that the Pass is valid." You become 28 years old at 12 midnight immediately preceding your 28th birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
3
@chx It's not a matter of a particular set of T&C because "everybody knows" how to reckon ages -- namely as a whole number of years, rounding down. Children learn this without even being taught, if they grow up in the west. The OP may not know this, if he's from a culture that handles birthdays and ages differently - or if he knows that some cultures do it differently and is unsure if Europe is one of those - but that doesn't mean a particular company's documents would spell out things that "everybody knows".
– Henning Makholm
17 hours ago
No, everyone knows doesn't matter. The law does. law.stackexchange.com/q/38255/6859
– chx
9 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
The linked page doesn't say anything about birthdays. Without additional sources I would be cautious with this. The full T&C is mum on this as well.
– chx
yesterday
1
If you are 27 and 5 months you are "27". Unambiguously.
– Mark Perryman
yesterday
2
@chx - "A Youth Pass can only be used by travelers who are younger than 28 years of age on the first day that the Pass is valid." You become 28 years old at 12 midnight immediately preceding your 28th birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
3
@chx It's not a matter of a particular set of T&C because "everybody knows" how to reckon ages -- namely as a whole number of years, rounding down. Children learn this without even being taught, if they grow up in the west. The OP may not know this, if he's from a culture that handles birthdays and ages differently - or if he knows that some cultures do it differently and is unsure if Europe is one of those - but that doesn't mean a particular company's documents would spell out things that "everybody knows".
– Henning Makholm
17 hours ago
No, everyone knows doesn't matter. The law does. law.stackexchange.com/q/38255/6859
– chx
9 hours ago
The linked page doesn't say anything about birthdays. Without additional sources I would be cautious with this. The full T&C is mum on this as well.
– chx
yesterday
The linked page doesn't say anything about birthdays. Without additional sources I would be cautious with this. The full T&C is mum on this as well.
– chx
yesterday
1
1
If you are 27 and 5 months you are "27". Unambiguously.
– Mark Perryman
yesterday
If you are 27 and 5 months you are "27". Unambiguously.
– Mark Perryman
yesterday
2
2
@chx - "A Youth Pass can only be used by travelers who are younger than 28 years of age on the first day that the Pass is valid." You become 28 years old at 12 midnight immediately preceding your 28th birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
@chx - "A Youth Pass can only be used by travelers who are younger than 28 years of age on the first day that the Pass is valid." You become 28 years old at 12 midnight immediately preceding your 28th birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday
3
3
@chx It's not a matter of a particular set of T&C because "everybody knows" how to reckon ages -- namely as a whole number of years, rounding down. Children learn this without even being taught, if they grow up in the west. The OP may not know this, if he's from a culture that handles birthdays and ages differently - or if he knows that some cultures do it differently and is unsure if Europe is one of those - but that doesn't mean a particular company's documents would spell out things that "everybody knows".
– Henning Makholm
17 hours ago
@chx It's not a matter of a particular set of T&C because "everybody knows" how to reckon ages -- namely as a whole number of years, rounding down. Children learn this without even being taught, if they grow up in the west. The OP may not know this, if he's from a culture that handles birthdays and ages differently - or if he knows that some cultures do it differently and is unsure if Europe is one of those - but that doesn't mean a particular company's documents would spell out things that "everybody knows".
– Henning Makholm
17 hours ago
No, everyone knows doesn't matter. The law does. law.stackexchange.com/q/38255/6859
– chx
9 hours ago
No, everyone knows doesn't matter. The law does. law.stackexchange.com/q/38255/6859
– chx
9 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
Parthapratim Neog is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Parthapratim Neog is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Parthapratim Neog is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Parthapratim Neog is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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If the drinking age is 18, do you think you'd be able to buy alcohol if you're between 17 and 18?
– Dmitry Grigoryev
yesterday
@DmitryGrigoryev I understand your point. But, there's a clear line in your example, anything below 18 is not eligible, anything above is eligible. If you check here, it's not clearly given what happens to people between 27 and 28.
– Parthapratim Neog
yesterday
2
You cannot be "between" 27 and 28 years old in this context. When laws or regulations decree that a certain age, in years, provides, or removes, an entitlement or obligation, you reach that age on the appropriate birthday, and you keep that age until your next birthday.
– Michael Harvey
yesterday