Ince station was opened on 1 July 1863 by the
Birkenhead Joint Railway. It was renamed
Ince & Elton on 17 April 1884. This was never implemented, although services gradually began to reduce and the remaining through trains to/from Birkenhead Woodside ended in 1967 when the station there was closed. Services originally operated regularly between Helsby and Hooton via Ellesmere Port, with some services running through to
Rock Ferry prior to the electrification of the line between there and Hooton in 1985. Once electric trains began running to Hooton, the service was revamped to run between Chester and Helsby via Hooton (with a reversal there) every 30 minutes on weekdays & Saturdays. Convenient connections were available at Helsby for Warrington & Manchester and at Hooton for Liverpool. However, following the extension of the third rail southwards to Chester in 1993, the service east of Ellesmere Port was cut back substantially – most trains ran as a shuttle to Ellesmere Port only, with only a two-hourly service beyond there. The pattern was then altered again when electrification of the Hooton to Ellesmere Port section was completed in 1994 – from that point onwards, all services from Helsby terminated at Ellesmere Port but ran beyond Helsby to Warrington Bank Quay and
Liverpool Lime Street (every two hours Mon–Sat), calling at all stations en route. The new service was poorly patronised though, and by 1996 it had been cut back to the current pattern of two pairs of services each way in the early morning and mid afternoon. It was the worst performing English station for cancellations in the four weeks to 1 February 2025, according to data from the Office of Rail and Road (ORR), with 22.8% of trains cancelled. Some station signs are outdated, displaying information about those former services to Chester and Hooton (see image of sign on Platform 2). ==Facilities==