Planning and construction During the construction of the Plochingen–Tübingen railway, the
Royal Württemberg State Railways (
Königlich Württembergischen Staats-Eisenbahnen) already foresaw Metzingen becoming a railway junction. The town council asked the State Railways for a station to be built west of the
Erms. Instead the tracks were laid to the east of town to allow a better alignment and to facilitate the connection of the projected railway line towards Urach.
State Railways period On 20 September 1859, the State Railways opened the Plochingen–
Reutlingen section. The entrance building, which housed the post office in the beginning, has been preserved. The railway to Urach, with a possible continuation to
Münsingen planned, was opened from a junction in Metzingen on 27 December 1873. This line was initially operated by the private
Ermsthalbahn-Gesellschaft ("Erms Valley Railway Company"). The State Railways completed the double-tracking of the
Neckartailfingen–Metzingen line on 1 October 1901. It took over operations on the Erms Valley Railway on 1 April 1904. An iron footbridge enabled passengers to reach the island platform from 31 August 1907. On 8 November 1912, the council complained about the entrance building, the size of which, in their opinion, was no longer sufficient. Its deficiencies were mainly in the loading of luggage and goods. At this time, agriculture was still important to Metzingen. Farmers mainly loaded fruit, vegetables, wine, beef, pork and lumber. But even leather and iron goods were despatched at the station.
Reichsbahn period Electrification was completed between Plochingen and Tübingen on 1 October 1934.
Deutsche Reichsbahn accelerated the operation of freight traffic on this section in 1938. This included the removal of long stays by freight trains in Metzingen. The station's operations area received a
small locomotive for the shunting of freight trains. The Reichsbahn erected a wooden shed for them at the crossing of
Reichsstrasse 28 (now Ulmerstraße). It was mockingly called
Südbahnhof ("south station") by the Metzingen population. The local Nazis railed against the building. The
Nationalsozialistischen Mitteilungsblatt (“National Socialist Bulletin”) published an article entitled
Metzingen wehrt sich gegen Bausünden ("Metzingen resists eyesores"), in which they demanded its demolition, but this did not happen.
Bundesbahn period In 1959, one hundred years after the opening, 130 trains stopped at or passed through Metzingen each day. 112 ran on the Plochingen–Tübingen line and 18 ran on the branch line to Urach. Of these, 92 were passenger trains and 24 were freight trains. In addition there were 14 other scheduled trains, such as service trains and empty rolling stock movements. The high frequency made it essential to expand the station building, which was carried out in 1960. The old goods shed south of the station building had to be demolished in 1962 for the works.
Deutsche Bundesbahn replaced it in 1972. In the following years, rail traffic was reduced by the growth in the use of cars. The Bundesbahn discontinued passenger services on the Erms Valley Railway on 27 May 1976. The iron bridge from 1907 was replaced by an underpass in May 1982. It was removed in the following year. On 1 January 1988, the last freight was handled at Metzingen station. The shed for the small locomotive, which was now unneeded, was demolished.
Deutsche Bahn period With the recommencement of passenger services on the Erms Valley Railway using DMUs on 1 August 1999, Metzingen once again became a railway junction. Since the timetable change on 13 December 2009, a pair of InterCity trains has stopped in Metzingen. The unused goods shed was demolished in June 2011 to create a site for a commercial building and parking. Since 2016, Deutsche Bahn has made a number of changes in the station, including the dismantling of a track. As part of a track renovation, a level crossing (cart crossing) to the platform for tracks 2 and 3 was removed. This means that the platform is no longer accessible. Preliminary planning for barrier-free access began in 2016. Due to the narrow platform width, a lift could only have been installed provisionally and not before 2019. Widening the platform would have required a comprehensive redesign of the track system, costing almost €10 million. The start of construction was celebrated on 27 January 2022. The €10.5 million project was scheduled for completion in 2024. On 18 July 2023, work began on raising the platform on track 1 to . == Entrance building ==