Long-distance services The Schwerte–Warburg section is no longer served by long-distance trains. There used to be a
D-Zug express train on the
Amsterdam–
Bad Wildungen route, using the line, and express trains to
Kassel,
Leipzig and
Berlin. In 1941 a holiday express train ran on the
Brest-Litovsk–
Bebra–Arnsberg–
Aachen–
Brussels–
Ostend route. An express train ran until 1991 from Amsterdam to
Korbach; it reversed in Brilon Wald and ran on the
Upland Railway (
Uplandbahn) to Korbach, with through coaches continuing on the Edersee Railway (
Ederseebahn) to Bad Wildungen. In the 1990s, trains ran from
Duisburg and
Cologne to Willingen and Korbach on autumn weekends. The last pair of express trains were D 2641 and D 2640, which ran once a week between
Düsseldorf and Willingen until December 2003. Long-distance trains coming from the west had to change to diesel traction at Hagen station as the line is not electrified.
Regional services The non-electrified line was for a long time served with diesel hauled regional trains. In 2002, the regular use of locomotives ended and the trains have since been operated with multiple units. These regional services connect the
Higher Sauerland District with the urban centres of the Ruhr area. In addition, the Upper Ruhr Valley Railway gives access via branch lines to accommodate excursions to mountain resorts in the winter. The Upper Ruhr Valley Railway between Hagen and Warburg is now served every hour by the RE 17 (
Sauerland-Express) service. Every two hours these trains continue to/from
Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe. In
Hesse, the Sauerland-Express is however numbered as the RE 3. The Fröndenberg–Bestwig section is also supplemented with an hourly service of the RE 57 (the
Dortmund-Sauerland-Express), continuing to Winterberg. As a result, the Fröndenberg–Bestwig section is served at 30-minute intervals on weekdays. The line is operated with
RegioSwinger (class 612) sets between Schwerte and Wickede at 140 km/h, continuing through Warburg to Kassel at a maximum speed of 140 km/h. Earlier the RE 17 was operated with
Class 218 locomotives hauling three to six
Silberling carriages together with
class 624 diesel multiple units and later with
class 628 DMUs. Today the services to and from Kassel are operated with class 612 sets and the services that turn back at Warburg with class 628.4 sets. The RE 57 in the first years of its service operated on the Meschede–Schwerte section. It was then extended from Schwerte to Dortmund and joined to the Bestwig–Winterberg
Regionalbahn service. Originally it was operated with class 624 and 628 sets. After a European-wide tender as part of the Sauerland network,
DB Regio NRW was chosen to operate the service almost exclusively with class 648.1 (
Alstom Coradia LINT 41) sets since the summer of 2008; it is partly operated during the weekend with mixed sets including rebuilt 640 (LINT 27) sets. The so-called Säuferzüge ("boozer trains"), which are particularly popular with bowling clubs, are operated on the Hagen–Willingen route using triple class 648.1 sets and on the Dortmund–Willingen route with class 628.4 sets. On Fridays a section of RE 57 services that end every two hours in Bestwig continues to Willingen. The line also used by many special trips with steam trains and
rail buses.
Sauerland-Express The Sauerland-Express is a
Regional-Express services that runs from Hagen to Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe and is funded by the
Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Ruhr (Rhine-Ruhr Transport Association, VRR),
Verkehrsgemeinschaft Ruhr-Lippe (Ruhr-Lippe Transport Company, VRL),
Nahverkehrsverbund Paderborn-Höxter (Paderborn-Höxter Local Transport Association, nph) and
Nordhessischer Verkehrsverbund (North Hessian Transport Association, NVV). It is operated by
DB Regio NRW with class 612 and 628.4 sets and is popular with tourists and users of the
Schönen-Wochenende ("beautiful weekend") tickets.
Fares On the section from Hagen to Schwerte VRR fares apply. From Schwerte to Westheim VRL fares apply, from there to Warburg nph fares apply and finally the Warburg-Kassel section NPT fares apply.
Connections Dortmund-Sauerland-Express Fares On the section from Dortmund to Schwerte (which is not served) the fares of the VRR apply. VRL fares apply from Schwerte to Winterberg.
Connections Freight The operation of freight on the Upper Ruhr Valley Railway long acted as an extension of the
Mid-Germany Connection. This meant that the industry of the Ruhr was connected with supply points to the east. This east–west traffic increasingly fell away after the Second World War and it was used almost entirely for local freight traffic. Today, scheduled freight traffic is hauled by
class 294 locomotives. In the early morning hours, two trains operate along the Ruhr valley. ==Notes==