Train Station Finder

Search 51,000+ train stations worldwide by name, city, country, or coordinate radius.

Finder

Search more than 51,000 train stations worldwide by name, city, country, or rail operator. Each result shows the station name, city, country, coordinates, and network context so you can quickly identify the stop you need. Use the country filter to narrow the search, or enable proximity mode to find every station within a given radius of a reference coordinate — ideal for planning multi-stop journeys, comparing commuter networks, or discovering lesser-known halts on a route.

工作原理

1

Type a Keyword

Enter at least 2 characters — a station name, city, or well-known terminal (for example 'Tokyo', 'Gare du Nord', or 'Waterloo'). Results update as you type.

2

Filter by Country

Pick a country from the dropdown, or paste latitude and longitude coordinates to filter by straight-line distance in kilometers.

3

Open a Station

Each result card links to the full station page with platforms, operators, routes, facilities, and the surrounding rail network.

Tip: enter a reference coordinate to restrict results to stations within a given distance (Haversine great-circle).

Presets:

Searching stations...

station(s) found

No stations matched your filters. Try a different keyword, remove the country filter, or widen the radius.

Type at least 2 characters above or pick a preset to start.

How to Use

  1. 1
    Type a Keyword

    Enter at least 2 characters -- a station name, city, or well-known terminal (e.g. Tokyo, Gare du Nord, Waterloo). Results update as you type.

  2. 2
    Filter by Country

    Pick a country from the dropdown, or paste latitude and longitude coordinates to filter by straight-line distance in kilometers.

  3. 3
    Open a Station

    Each result card links to the full station page with platforms, operators, routes, facilities, and the surrounding rail network.

About

Rail transportation is one of the oldest and most energy-efficient forms of mass transit. The world's modern railway networks trace back to the opening of the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825, and today more than 1.3 million kilometers of track connect cities, towns, and rural halts across every inhabited continent.

A train station is more than a platform: it is a node in a routing graph that aggregates timetables, operators, platforms, track gauges, and passenger services. Major interchanges such as New York Grand Central, Beijing South, and Paris Gare du Nord each handle hundreds of thousands of passengers every day.

The TrainFYI station database catalogs every published station -- major, standard, halt, and junction -- with verified coordinates, operator links, and route connections so that developers, travelers, and researchers can explore the global rail network from one place.

FAQ

What types of train stations are in the database?
The database covers four broad categories: major terminals, standard stations, halts (small regional stops), and junctions (interchanges where lines meet). Every record includes the official name, coordinates, country, and -- where published -- the number of platforms and year opened.
What is the difference between a station, a stop, and a halt?
A station usually has staffed facilities, multiple platforms, and ticket offices. A stop is an unstaffed point where trains pause briefly. A halt is the smallest category -- often a single platform on a rural branch line.
Can I find historic train stations?
Yes. Stations opened in the 19th century -- such as Gare de l'Est (1849), London King's Cross (1852), and Grand Central Terminal (1913) -- are all in the database with their year opened listed.
Which are the busiest train stations in the world?
By daily passenger volume, the busiest are in Japan: Shinjuku (3.5 million passengers/day), Shibuya, and Ikebukuro. In Europe, Paris Gare du Nord handles roughly 700,000 per day. India's Howrah Junction handles over 1 million daily.
How accurate are the station coordinates?
Coordinates use the WGS84 reference system (the same datum used by GPS). Most entries are accurate to within 50 meters of the station entrance. Haversine distance calculations between stations are accurate to within 0.5%.