The station opened in 1900 as part of the Salonica Monastir railway, built by the Enotikos Thessalonica-Istanbul Company. The station, along with the line west, was annexed by
Greece on 18 October 1912 during the
First Balkan War. On 17 October 1925, The Greek government purchased the Greek sections of the former Salonica Monastir railway, and the railway became part of the
Hellenic State Railways, with the remaining section north of
Florina seeded to
Yugoslavia. On 1 January 1971, the station and most of the Greek rail infrastructure were transferred to the
Hellenic Railways Organisation S.A., a state-owned corporation. Freight traffic declined sharply when the state-imposed monopoly of OSE for the transport of agricultural products and fertilisers ended in the early 1990s. Many small stations of the network with little passenger traffic were closed down. In 2001 the infrastructure element of OSE was created, known as
GAIAOSE; it would henceforth be responsible for the maintenance of stations, bridges and other elements of the network, as well as the leasing and the sale of railway assists. In 2003, OSE launched "Proastiakos SA", as a subsidiary to serve the operation of the suburban network in the urban complex of Athens during the
2004 Olympic Games. In 2005, TrainOSE was created as a brand within OSE to concentrate on rail services and passenger interface. On 9 September 2007, the station reopened. In 2008, all Proastiakos services were transferred from OSE to TrainOSE. In 2009, with the
Greek debt crisis unfolding
OSE's Management was forced to reduce services across the network. Timetables were cut back, and routes closed as the government-run entity attempted to reduce overheads. Services from Thessaloniki and Alexandroupolis were reduced from six to just two trains a day, reducing the reliability of services and passenger numbers. In 2017
OSE's passenger transport sector was privatised as
TrainOSE, currently, a wholly owned subsidiary of Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane infrastructure, including stations, remained under the control of OSE. Since 2020, the station has been served by the
Thessaloniki Regional Railway (formerly the Suburban Railway). In July 2022, the station began being served by
Hellenic Train, the rebranded TranOSE In August 2025, the
Greek Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport confirmed the creation of a new body,
Greek Railways () to assume responsibility for rail infrastructure, planning, modernisation projects, and rolling stock across
Greece. Previously, these functions were divided among several state-owned entities:
OSE, which managed infrastructure;
ERGOSÉ, responsible for modernisation projects; and
GAIAOSÉ, which owned stations, buildings, and rolling stock. OSE had overseen both infrastructure and operations until its vertical separation in 2005. Rail safety has been identified as a key priority. The merger follows the July approval of a Parliamentary Bill to restructure the national railway system, a direct response to the
Tempi accident of February 2023, in which 43 people died after a head-on collision. ==Services==