Newhaven Harbour railway station


Newhaven Harbour railway station is one of two active stations serving Newhaven in East Sussex, England, the other being. A third,, is legally open but its station buildings have been demolished and the only services which run to it are parliamentary trains. Although the line opened in 1847 the station was opened by London, Brighton and South Coast Railway in 1886.
Trains are operated by Southern and the station is on the Seaford Branch of the East Coastway Line, measured from. Beyond the station en route to, the line reduces to single track to Seaford.
The station is adjacent to the harbour industrial estate and freight terminal. The passenger terminal for the Port of Newhaven which has regular ferry sailings to Dieppe in France is served by Newhaven Town railway station. The station despite its name has not been used as the main ferry terminal station, originally Newhaven Marine was the foot passenger terminal, before it moved to Newhaven Town.
The station has two platforms joined by a bridge, with Permit to Travel Machines on both platforms.
Newhaven Harbour's signal box was demolished on Sunday 15 March 2020, several months after the Seaford branch resignalling project transferred signalling control to Three Bridges ROC.

Services

the typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:
There are also two trains to London Victoria station on weekday mornings.