Heavy rail The rail network includes the
coastal railway line spanning from
Nahariya in the north to
Tel Aviv in the south, through
Acre,
Haifa (with a spur to eastern Haifa),
Netanya and other cities. A small commuter line goes from
Kfar Saba in the north to Tel Aviv, and connects to a freight-only line from
Rosh HaAyin to
Lod, part of the partially defunct
Eastern railway. Plans exist to rebuild the eastern railway from
Hadera to Rosh HaAyin, with a spur to
Afula. Six lines go south from Tel Aviv, including two lines to
Rishon LeZion, one of which continues to
Yavne with a section from Yavne to Ashdod currently under construction; a line to
Ashkelon through
Lod and
Rehovot with a spur to the
Port of Ashdod; a line to
Modi'in through
Ben Gurion International Airport; a line to
Jerusalem, which is part of the historical
Jaffa–Jerusalem railway; and the
railway to Beersheba, with branches to
Ramat Hovav and the
Israel Chemicals factories through
Dimona. The railway to Beersheba is also connected to the line to Ashkelon through the
Heletz railway.
Network expansion Several major railway projects are expected to be carried out starting in the early 2020s. The first involves relieving the national rail network bottleneck caused by insufficient capacity in the Ayalon section of the Coastal Railway through the addition of a fourth railroad track between Tel Aviv Central and Tel Aviv HaHagana. The overall project also includes adding two additional tracks to the Tel Aviv–Lod railway. Another major project that began construction is the
Rishon LeZion–Modi'in railway, linking
Rishon LeZion and
Modi'in via
Highway 431, with a connection to the new Tel Aviv–Jerusalem railway. This will allow direct train travel between Jerusalem and Modi'in and the southern
Gush Dan suburbs. The third major project expected to commence by 2020 is the rebuilding of the long-defunct Kfar Sava–Hadera section of the
Eastern railway, which will create a new north–south railway corridor in central Israel. The project also includes upgrading the existing Eastern railway section between Rosh Ha’ayin and Lod. Longer-term plans call for a
railway to Eilat (Med-Red), a line to
Arad through
Nevatim and
Kseifa, a line to
Nazareth and continuing the Karmiel and Jezreel Valley lines to
Kiryat Shmona,
Safed and
Tiberias.
Electrification In the spring of 2010, the government of Israel voted to appropriate the sum of NIS 11.2 billion out of a total NIS 17.2 billion (appx. US $4.5 billion) necessary to implement the first phase of Israel Railways' electrification programme. This phase includes electrifying 420 km of railways using
25 kV 50 Hz AC, the construction of 14 transformer stations, the purchase of electric rolling stock, and upgrades to maintenance facilities as well as to signalling and control systems (including the installation of
ETCS Level 2 signaling throughout the network). Preliminary design for the electrification effort was conducted by Tedem Civil Engineering in the early 2000s, while Yanai Electrical Engineering was selected by Israel Railways in 2011 to carry out the detailed design of the system. In December 2015 Israel Railways announced that the Spanish engineering firm SEMI (Sociedad Española de Montajes Industriales) won the tender for constructing the electrification infrastructure. , there are 4 electrified lines •
Tel Aviv–Jerusalem railway. • Herzliya–Ashkelon • Jerusalem–Modi'in • Ashkelon/Rehovot–Netanya/Binyamina
Technical characteristics The following standards are employed throughout the mainline heavy rail network in Israel: • Rail gauge: • Max speed: • Rail type: UIC60 or UIC54 ( or ), continuously welded •
Loading gauge: UIC GC •
Minimum curve radius: (main lines) • Common distance between track centers of multi-tracked railways: • Train protection system:
PZB/Indusi •
Interlocking: Electronic (
Thales LockTrac 6111/ESTW L90) •
National traffic control system: Thales NetTrac 6613 ARAMIS •
Railway coupling: Buffers and chain (locomotive drawn),
Scharfenberg (
multiple unit trainsets) • Maximum
gradient: 29
‰ • Max rolling stock
axle load: 22.5 metric ton per axle • Minimum number of
sleepers per kilometer: 1667 (mostly B70 prestressed concrete monoblock) • Passenger platform minimum length: (some older stations use the previous standard of ; new and upgraded stations: ) • Electrification: Single-phase
25 kV 50 Hz AC OCS • Train control system:
ERTMS (
GSM-R/
ETCS L2) – will replace Indusi
Sandwich stations An interesting character of the current Israeli railway network is that many of the new tracks and railway stations are located in the
median strip of the
Israeli highway system. The first station such located was the
Tel Aviv Savidor Central railway station, whose original platforms directly north of the station hall were closed and replaced with new platforms in the median strip of the
Ayalon Freeway in 1988; the first station purpose-built in this arrangement was the
Tel Aviv HaShalom railway station, a kilometer south of Savidor Central.
Metro/Light rail in
Jerusalem The first light rail line in Israel is the
Jerusalem Light Rail, which opened in 2011. The line is long and goes from
Mount Herzl in the west to
Pisgat Ze'ev in the east. An extension of the western side to
Hadassah Ein Kerem and the eastern side to
Neve Ya'akov is under construction and was opened in 2023. The
Green Line is under construction (planned to open in 2025). A major
LRT network is under construction in the
Tel Aviv metropolitan area, with three lines of the
Tel Aviv Light Rail for a total of and 139 stations. The
Red Line (opened in 2023) connects
Petah Tikva in the northeast to
Bat Yam in the southwest, with a underground section, passing through
Tel Aviv,
Bnei Brak, and
Ramat Gan. It has 34 stations, including 10 underground ones. The
Green Line will run from
Holon to
Rishon LeZion through central Tel Aviv, and from there will split into two branches, one to
Herzliya and the other to the
Ramat HaHayal neighborhood of Tel Aviv. It will include a underground section. The line will have 62 stations, including 4 underground ones. The
Purple Line will start at
Tel Aviv Savidor Central railway station, passing through the city and continuing east to
Yehud with an extension to
Kiryat Ono and
Bar Ilan University. It will have 43 stations. Unlike the other two lines, it will be entirely above ground. Both the Green Line and the Purple Line are under construction and the estimated opening year is 2027/2028. The
Tel Aviv Metro, an extensive 3-line subway system, is planned for Tel Aviv and surrounding cities in the
Gush Dan area. It will consist of 3 lines with a total length of and 109 stations. Construction began in 2025 and operation of the first sections is scheduled for 2032. The
Haifa–Nazareth railway is a
tram-train line from
Haifa to
Nazareth currently under construction. It will have 20 stations. Preliminary construction started in 2022 and in February 2024 a consortium of Alstom, Electra and Manrav was announced as selected to build an operate the line for 25 years. The contract was officially signed on 16 May 2024. Nazareth is the largest city in Israel without passenger rail service. An underground
funicular rail line, called
Carmelit, was opened in Haifa in 1959. It is long and has 6 stations. If one is to define it as subway (most definitions exclude it from the category "subway") it would be the first in the
MENA region or the second after
Tünel which was built in what was then the
Ottoman Empire but is usually also not considered a subway. The
Beersheba Light Rail, which will serve the city of
Beersheba and outlying towns, was approved in August 2023. It is expected to be completed in 2033. The
Ashkelon Mass Transit System, a planned mass transit system for the
Ashkelon Subdistrict, is expected to include two light rail lines which will cover the cities of
Ashdod,
Ashkelon,
Rehovot, and
Yavne. ==Passenger traffic==