Rainford Junction is so called because it contained the junction between the
Liverpool & Bury Railway's
Skelmersdale Branch and
St Helens Railway, and is now home to the village's only railway station. The railway station is on the
Headbolt Lane –
Manchester Victoria via
Wigan line. Passengers wishing to travel to Liverpool must change at Headbolt Lane onto the
Merseyrail electrified line.
Rainford Village railway station, located on Cross Pit Lane, served the centre of the village from 1858 until closure in 1951. It was located on the line to
St Helens Shaw Street railway station. Rainford sits alongside the
A570 (Rainford Bypass), a dual carriageway constructed in the late 1930s to supplant the original route running through the village centre. The A570 connects at one end to the
East Lancashire Road (A580) and, at the other end, the
M58 motorway. This results in excellent road links, and the village therefore has many inhabitants who commute to the nearby cities of
Liverpool and
Manchester and to St Helens. There are bus services in Rainford; as at November 2015
Arriva North West operate service 38 which connects the village and Rainford Junction to St Helens every 30 minutes. Evening and Sunday journeys on this service are numbered 356 and go via Crank approximately hourly.
HTL Buses operate the 152 from St Helens to Rainford with a few services extended to
Ormskirk. The 157 goes to
Ashton and is currently operated by
Cumfybus, and a new service announced by
Lancashire County Council will operate from Ormskirk, through to
Burscough and
Skelmersdale, terminating in Rainford. This service will also serve Rainford High School. ==Culture and recreation==