The
Great Western Railway opened the station on 26 September 1905, several decades after the rest of the stations on this part of the line. It was used for race specials only. It did not even appear on timetables until 1912 but even then, it was still used only for race traffic. In 1990, after the building of new facilities at the racecourse and the building of a new industrial estate on Hambridge Road, a regular stopping service was introduced for the station. sign, still in use in 2010 The station originally had four platforms. The additional platform was on the south-facing side of what is now platform two. The platform on the south side also included station buildings and a roof through which passengers passed to access the racecourse. There was also a
turntable at the station used for turning
steam locomotives that had brought specials at the start of the race day so they could make the return journey.
Service history The station was part of the GWR until
railway nationalisation in 1948. After the sectorisation of
British Rail in 1982, the station became part of
Network SouthEast.
Thames Trains provided services from 1996 until it became part of
First Great Western Link in 2004 and
First Great Western in 2006. In January 2021 GWR announced a temporary timetable change, in effect from February, which would mean an additional 17 trains stopped at Newbury Racecourse station daily. This was intended to make it easier to travel to the
COVID-19 vaccination centre at Newbury Racecourse. ==Current layout==