
in
Paris.]]
electric multiple unit used in
Auckland,
New Zealand ]]
Commuter rail, or suburban rail, is a
passenger rail transport service that primarily operates within a
metropolitan area, connecting
commuters to a
central city from adjacent
suburbs or
commuter towns.
Generally commuter rail systems are considered
heavy rail, using electrified or diesel trains.
Distance charges or
zone pricing may be used.
The term can refer to systems with a wide variety of different features and service frequencies, but is often used in contrast to
rapid transit or
light rail.
Similar non-English terms include ''Treno suburbano'' in Italian, ''
Cercanías'' in Spanish, ''
Rodalies'' in Catalan,
Aldiriak in Basque,
Rodalia in Valencian,
Proximidades in Galician, ''
Proastiakos'' in Greek, ''Train de banlieue'' in French, ''Příměstský vlak'' or ''Esko'' in Czech, ''
Elektrichka'' in Russian, ''Pociąg podmiejski '' in Polish and ''Pendeltåg'' in Swedish.
Some services share similarities with both commuter rail and high-frequency
rapid transit, examples being the German
S-Bahn in some cities, the
Réseau Express Régional (RER) in Paris, many Japanese commuter systems, the
West Rail line in Hong Kong and some Australasian suburban networks. Some services, like
British commuter rail, share tracks with other passenger services and
freight.
In the United States, commuter rail often refers to services that operate a higher frequency during
peak periods and a lower frequency off-peak. Since the creation of Toronto's
GO Transit commuter service in 1967, commuter rail services and route length have been expanding in
North America. In the US, commuter rail is sometimes referred to as
regional rail.
Characteristics
thumb|_serves_the_Greater_[[Golden_Horseshoe">GO_Transit_serves_the_Greater_[[Golden_Horseshoe_region_surrounding_Toronto._Its_train_services_are_transitioning_from_a_peak_direction_commuter_railway_to_a_[[GO_Transit_Regional_Express_Rail.html" style="text-decoration: none;"class="mw-redirect" title="Golden_Horseshoe.html" style="text-decoration: none;"class="mw-redirect" title="GO Transit serves the Greater [[Golden Horseshoe">GO Transit serves the Greater [[Golden Horseshoe region surrounding Toronto. Its train services are transitioning from a peak direction commuter railway to a [[GO Transit Regional Express Rail">Regional Express Network.]]
Most commuter (or suburban) trains are built to main line rail standards, differing from [[light rail]] or [[rapid transit]] (metro rail) systems by:
*being larger
*providing more seating and less standing room, owing to the longer distances involved
*having (in most cases) a lower frequency of service
*having scheduled services (i.e. trains run at specific times rather than at specific intervals)
*serving lower-density suburban areas, typically connecting
suburbs to the city center
*sharing track or
right-of-way with intercity and/or
freight trains
*not fully grade separated (containing at-grade crossings with crossing gates)
*being able to skip certain stations as an express service due to normally being driver controlled
Train schedule
Compared to
rapid transit (or metro rail), commuter/suburban rail often has lower
frequency, following a schedule rather than fixed intervals, and fewer stations spaced further apart. They primarily serve lower density suburban areas (non inner-city), and often share
right-of-way with intercity or
freight trains. Some services operate only during peak hours and others uses fewer departures during off peak hours and weekends. Average speeds are high, often 50 km/h (30 mph) or higher. These higher speeds better serve the longer distances involved. Some services include express services which skip some stations in order to run faster and separate longer distance riders from short-distance ones.
The general range of commuter trains' travel distance varies between 15 and 200 km (10 and 125 miles), but longer distances can be covered when the trains run between two or several cities (e.g. S-Bahn in the
Ruhr area of Germany). Distances between stations may vary, but are usually much longer than those of urban rail systems. In city centers the train either has a terminal station or passes through the city centre with notably fewer station stops than those of urban rail systems. Toilets are often available on-board trains and in stations.
Track
Their ability to coexist with freight or intercity services in the same
right-of-way can drastically reduce system construction costs. However, frequently they are built with dedicated tracks within that right-of-way to prevent delays, especially where service densities have converged in the inner parts of the network.
Most such trains run on the
local standard gauge track. Some systems may run on a narrower or broader gauge. Examples of
narrow gauge systems are found in Japan,
Indonesia,
Malaysia,
Thailand, Taiwan, Switzerland, in the
Brisbane (
Queensland Rail's
City network) and
Perth (
Transperth) systems in Australia, in some systems in Sweden, and on the
Genoa-Casella line in Italy. Some countries and regions, including
Finland, India, Pakistan,
Russia, Brazil and Sri Lanka, as well as
San Francisco (
BART) in the US and
Melbourne and
Adelaide in Australia, use
broad gauge track.
Distinction between other modes of rail
Metro
Metro rail or
rapid transit usually covers a smaller inner-urban area ranging outwards to between 12 km to 20 km (or 8 to 14 miles), has a higher train frequency and runs on separate tracks (underground or elevated), whereas commuter rail often shares tracks, technology and the legal framework within mainline railway systems.
However, the classification as a metro or rapid rail can be difficult as both may typically cover a metropolitan area exclusively, run on separate tracks in the centre, and often feature purpose-built rolling stock. The fact that the terminology is not standardised across countries (even across English-speaking countries) further complicates matters. This distinction is most easily made when there are two (or more) systems such as New York's
subway and the
LIRR and
Metro-North Railroad, Paris'
Métro and
RER along with
Transilien, Washington D.C.'s
Metro along with its
MARC and
VRE, London's tube lines of the
Underground and the
Overground, (future)
Crossrail,
Thameslink along with other commuter rail
operators, Madrid's
Metro and
Cercanías, Barcelona's
Metro and
Rodalies, and Tokyo's
subway and the
JR lines along with various privately owned and operated commuter rail systems.
S-Trains
An
S-Train is a type of hybrid
urban-
suburban rail serving a
metropolitan region, most often in the German-speaking countries. The most well-known S-train systems are the S-Bahn systems in Germany and Austria with other well-known examples being the
S-tog in
Copenhagen and S-Bahn/RER systems in
Switzerland. In Germany, the
S-Bahn is regarded as a train category of its own, and exists in many large cities and in some other areas, with differing service and technical standards from city to city.
Most S-Bahns typically behave like commuter rail with most trackage not separated from other trains, and long lines with trains running between cities and suburbs rather than within a city. The distances between stations however, are usually short. In larger systems there is usually a high frequency metro-like central corridor in the city center into which all the lines converge. Typical examples of large city S-Bahns include Munich and Frankfurt. S-Bahns also exist in some mid-size cities like Rostock and Magdeburg but behave more like typical commuter rail with lower frequencies and very little exclusive trackage. In
Berlin, the
S-Bahn systems arguably fulfill all considerations of a true metro system (despite the existence of
U-Bahns as well) – the trains run on tracks that are entirely separated from other trains, there are short distances between stations, the trains are high frequency, and use tunnels but do run a bit further out from the city centre compared with U-Bahn. In Hamburg and Copenhagen, other, diesel driven trains, do continue where the S-Bahn ends ("
A-Bahn" in Hamburg area, and "L-tog" in Copenhagen).
Regional rail
Regional rail usually provides
rail services between towns and cities, rather than purely linking major population hubs in the way
inter-city rail does. Regional rail operates outside major cities. Unlike Inter-city, it stops at most or all stations between cities. It provides a service between smaller communities along the line, and also connections with long-distance services at interchange stations located at junctions or at larger towns along the line. Alternative names are "local train" or "stopping train". Examples include the former
BR's
Regional Railways, France's
TER (''Transport express régional''), Germany's
DB Regio and South Korea's
Tonggeun services.
Regional rail does not exist in this sense in the United States, so the term "regional rail" has become synonymous with commuter rail there, although the two are more clearly defined in Europe.
Inter-city rail
In some European countries the distinction between commuter trains and long-distance/intercity trains is very hard to make, because of the relatively short distances involved. For example, so-called "
intercity" trains in Belgium and the Netherlands carry many commuters and their equipment, range and speeds are similar to those of commuter trains in some larger countries. In the United Kingdom there is no real division of organisation and brand name between commuter, regional and inter-city trains, making it hard to categorize train connections.
Russian commuter trains, on the other hand, frequently cover areas larger than Belgium itself, although these are still short distances by Russian standards. They have a different ticketing system from long-distance trains, and in major cities they often operate from a separate section of the train station.
The easiest way to identify these "inter-city" services is that they tend to operate as express services - only linking the main stations in the cities they link, not stopping at any other stations. However, this term is used in Australia (Sydney for example) to describe the regional trains operating beyond the boundaries of the suburban services, even though some of these "inter-city" services stop all stations similar to German regional services. In this regard, the German service delineations and corresponding naming conventions are clearer and better used for academic purposes.
High-speed rail

Sometimes
high-speed rail can serve daily use of commuters. The Japanese
Shinkansen high speed rail system is heavily used by commuters in the
Greater Tokyo Area. They commute between 100 and 200 km by
Shinkansen. To meet the demand of commuters,
JR sells commuter discount passes and operates 16-car
bilevel E4 Series Shinkansen trains at rush hour, providing a capacity of 1,600 seats. Several lines in China, such as the
Beijing–Tianjin Intercity Railway and the
Shanghai–Nanjing High-Speed Railway, serve a similar role with many more under construction or planned.
The high-speed services linking
Zürich,
Bern and
Basel in
Switzerland () have brought the Central Business Districts (CBDs) of these three cities within 1 hour of each other. This has resulted in unexpectedly high demand for new commuter trips between the three cities and a corresponding increase in suburban rail passengers accessing the high-speed services at the main city-centre stations (or Hauptbahnhof). The
Regional-Express commuter service between
Munich and
Nuremberg in Germany go in () along a
300 km/h high-speed line.
The regional trains
Stockholm–
Uppsala, Stockholm–
Västerås, Stockholm–
Eskilstuna and
Gothenburg–
Trollhättan in
Sweden reach and have many daily commuters.
Train types
Commuter/suburban trains are usually optimized for maximum passenger volume, in most cases without sacrificing too much comfort and
luggage space, though they seldom have all the amenities of long-distance trains. Cars may be single- or
double-level, and aim to provide seating for all. Compared to intercity trains, they have less space, fewer amenities and limited baggage areas.
Multiple unit type
Commuter rail trains are usually composed of
multiple units, which are self-propelled, bidirectional, articulated passenger rail cars with driving motors on each (or every other)
bogie. Depending on local circumstances and tradition they may be powered either by
diesel engines located below the passenger compartment (
diesel multiple units) or by electricity picked up from
third rails or
overhead lines (
electric multiple units). Multiple units are almost invariably equipped with control cabs at both ends, which is why such units are so frequently used to provide commuter services, due to the associated short turn-around time.
Locomotive hauled services

Locomotive hauled services are used in some countries or locations. This is often a case of
asset sweating, by using a single large combined fleet for intercity and regional services. Loco hauled services are usually run in
push-pull formation, that is, the train can run with the locomotive at the "front" or "rear" of the train (pushing or pulling). Trains are often equipped with a control cab at the other end of the train from the locomotive, allowing the train operator to operate the train from either end. The motive power for locomotive-hauled commuter trains may be either electric or
diesel-electric, although some countries, such as Germany and some of the former Soviet-bloc countries, also use diesel-hydraulic locomotives.
Seat plans
In the US and some other countries, a three-and-two seat plan is used. However, few people sit in the middle seat on these trains because they feel crowded and uncomfortable.
In Japan and South Korea, longitudinal (sideways window-lining) seating is widely used in many commuter rail trains to increase capacity in rush hours. Carriages are usually not organized to increase
seating capacity (although in some trains at least one carriage would feature more doors to facilitate easier boarding and alighting and bench seats so that they can be folded up during rush hour to provide more standing room) even in the case of commuting longer than 50 km and commuters in the
Greater Tokyo Area and the
Seoul metropolitan area have to stand in the train for more than an hour.
Commuter rail systems around the world
Africa

Currently there are not many examples of commuter rail in
Africa.
Metrorail operates in the major cities of
South Africa, and there are some commuter rail services in
Algeria,
Botswana,
Kenya,
Morocco,
Egypt and
Tunisia.
In Algeria,
SNTF operates commuter rail lines between the capital
Algiers and its southern and eastern suburbs. They also serve to connect
Algiers' main
universities to each other. The
Dar es Salaam commuter rail offers intracity services in
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. In Botswana, the (
Botswana Railways) "BR Express" has a commuter train between
Lobatse and
Gaborone.
Asia
East Asia

In Japan, commuter rail systems have extensive network and frequent service and are heavily used. In many cases, Japanese commuter rail is operationally more like a typical metro system (with very high operating frequencies, an emphasis on
standing passengers, short station spacing) than it is like commuter rail in other countries. Japanese commuter rail also tends to be heavily interlined with subway lines, with commuter rail trains continuing into the subway network, and then out onto different commuter rail systems on the other side of the city. Many Japanese commuter systems operate several levels of express trains to reduce the travel time to distant locations, often using station bypass tracks instead of dedicated express tracks. It is notable that the larger Japanese commuter rail systems are owned and operated by for-profit
private railway companies, without public subsidy.
Commuter rail systems have been inaugurated in several cities in China such as
Beijing,
Shanghai,
Zhengzhou,
Wuhan,
Changsha and the
Pearl River Delta. With plans for large systems in northeastern
Zhejiang,
Jingjinji, and
Yangtze River Delta areas. The level of service varies considerably from line to line ranging
high to near high speeds. More developed and established lines such as the
Guangshen Railway have more frequent metro like service. Hong Kong
MTR's
East Rail line,
West Rail line and
Tung Chung line were built to commuter rail standards but are operated as a metro system.
In Taiwan,
Western line in
Taipei-
Taoyuan Metropolitan Area,
Taichung Metropolitan Area,
Tainan-
Kaohsiung Metropolitan Area as well as
Neiwan-
Liujia line in
Hsinchu Area is considered commuter rail.
Other examples in East Asia include
Seoul Metropolitan Subway of which some lines are suburban lines operated by
Korail in South Korea.
Southeast Asia

In
Indonesia, the
KRL Commuterline is the largest commuter rail system in the country, serving
Jakarta metropolitan area. It connects the
Jakarta city center with surrounding cities and sub-urbans in
Banten and
West Java provinces, including
Depok,
Bogor,
Tangerang,
Bekasi, Serpong, Rangkasbitung, and Maja. In July 2015, KA Commuter Jabodetabek served more than 850,000 passengers per day, which is almost triple of the 2011 figures, but still less than 3.5% of all Jabodetabek commutes.
Other commuter rail systems in Indonesia include the
Metro Surabaya Commuter Line,
Prambanan Ekspres,
KRL Commuterline Yogyakarta–Solo, Kedung Sepur, Greater Bandung Commuter, and Cut Meutia.
In the Philippines, the
Philippine National Railways has two commuter rail systems currently operational; the
PNR Metro Commuter Line in the
Greater Manila Area and the
PNR Bicol Commuter in the
Bicol Region. A new commuter rail line in Metro Manila, the
North–South Commuter Railway, is currently under construction. Its North section is set to be partially opened by 2021.
In Malaysia, there are two commuter services operated by
Keretapi Tanah Melayu. They are the
KTM Komuter that serves
Kuala Lumpur and the surrounding
Klang Valley area, and the
KTM Komuter Northern Sector that serves
Greater Penang,
Perak,
Kedah and
Perlis in the northern region of Peninsular Malaysia.
In Thailand, the
Greater Bangkok Commuter rail and the
Airport Rail Link serve the
Bangkok Metropolitan Region. The
SRT Red Lines, a new commuter line in Bangkok, started construction in 2009. It is currently slated to be opened by 2020.
Another commuter rail system in Southeast Asia is the
Yangon Circular Railway in
Myanmar.
South Asia
''Main articles:
Mumbai Suburban Railway,
Kolkata Suburban Railway,
Chennai Suburban Railway''
In India, commuter rail systems are present in major cities.
Mumbai Suburban Railway, the oldest suburban rail system in Asia, carries more than 7.24 million commuters on a daily basis which constitutes more than half of the total daily passenger capacity of the Indian Railways itself.
Kolkata Suburban Railway is the biggest Suburban Railway network in India covering 348 stations carries more than 3.5 million commuters per day. The
Chennai Suburban Railway along with
MRTS is another railway of comparison where more than 2.5 million people travel daily to different areas in
Chennai. Other commuter railways in India include
Hyderabad MMTS,
Delhi Suburban Railway,
Pune Suburban Railway and
Lucknow-Kanpur Suburban Railway.
Delhi Regional Rapid Transit System (RRTS) is under construction on 3 routes in
Delhi NCR.The rotes have planned according to
Réseau Express Régional suburban lines in
Paris.
Karachi in
Pakistan has had a
circular railway since 1969.
Also, in
Bangladesh, there are several commuter rail systems.
West Asia
In Iran, SYSTRA has done a "Tehran long term urban rail study". SYSTRA proposed 4 express lines similar to
RER suburban lines in
Paris.
Tehran Metro is going to construct express lines. For instance, the Rahyab Behineh, a consultant for Tehran Metro, is studying Tehran Express Line 2. Tehran Metro currently has a commuter line, which is
Line 5 between
Tehran and
Karaj.
Isfahan has two lines to its suburbs
Baharestan and
Fuladshahr under construction, and a third line to
Shahinshahr is planned.
In Turkey;
Başkentray,
İZBAN, and
Marmaray are well-known examples.
Europe

Major metropolitan areas in most European countries are usually served by extensive commuter/suburban rail systems. Well-known examples include
BG Voz in
Belgrade (Serbia),
S-Bahn in Germany and German-speaking areas of Switzerland and Austria,
Proastiakos in Greece,
RER in France and Belgium,
suburban lines in
Milan (Italy),
Turin metropolitan railway service in
Turin (Italy),
Cercanías and
Rodalies (
Catalonia) in Spain,
CP Urban Services in Portugal,
Esko in
Prague and
Ostrava (Czech Republic),
HÉV in
Budapest (Hungary) and
DART in
Dublin (Ireland).
In Russia, Ukraine and some other countries of the former
Soviet Union, electrical multiple unit passenger suburban trains called
Elektrichka are widespread.
In Sweden, electrified commuter rail systems known as ''Pendeltåg'' are present in the cities of
Stockholm and
Gothenburg. The
Stockholm commuter rail system, which began in 1968, is similar to the S-Bahn train systems of Munich and Frankfurt such that it may share railway tracks with inter-city trains and freight trains, but for the most part run on its own dedicated tracks, and that it is primarily used to transport passengers from nearby towns and other suburban areas into the city centre, not for transportation inside the city centre. The
Gothenburg commuter rail system, which began in 1960, is similar to the Stockholm system, but does fully share tracks with long-distance trains. Other train systems that are also considered as commuter rail but not counted as ''pendeltåg'' include
Roslagsbanan and
Saltsjöbanan in Stockholm,
Mälartåg in the
Mälaren Valley,
Östgötapendeln in
Östergötland County,
Upptåget in
Uppsala County,
Norrtåg in northern
Norrland and
Skåne Commuter Rail in
Skåne County. Skåne Commuter Rail (''Pågatågen'') acts also as a regional rail system, as it serves cities over 100 km (62 miles) and over one hour from the principal city of
Malmö.
In Norway, the
Oslo commuter rail system mostly shares tracks with more long-distance trains, but also runs on some local railways without other traffic. Oslo has the largest commuter rail system in the Nordic countries in terms of line lengths and number of stations. But some lines have travel times (over an hour from Oslo) and frequencies (once per hour) which are more like regional trains. Also
Bergen,
Stavanger and
Trondheim have commuter rail systems. These have only one or two lines each and they share tracks with other trains.
In
Finland, the
Helsinki commuter rail network runs on dedicated tracks from
Helsinki Central railway station to
Leppävaara and
Kerava. The
Ring Rail Line serves
Helsinki Airport and northern suburbs of
Vantaa and is exclusively used by the commuter rail network. On 15 December 2019 Tampere got its own commuter rail service.

In Poland, commuter rail systems exist in
Tricity,
Warsaw,
Krakow (
SKM) and
Katowice (
SKR). There is also a similar system planned in
Wrocław and
Łódź.
In Romania, the first commuter trains were introduced in December 2019. They operate currently between
Bucharest and Funduea or
Buftea.
Americas
North America
In the United States, Canada, Costa Rica, El Salvador and Mexico regional passenger rail services are provided by governmental or quasi-governmental agencies, with a limited number of metropolitan areas served.
= United States
=
Eight commuter rail systems in the United States carried over ten million trips in 2018, those being in descending order:
*
Metropolitan Transportation Authority's
Long Island Rail Road, serving
New York City and
Long Island
*
NJ Transit Rail Operations, serving New York City, New Jersey (
Newark,
Trenton) and
Philadelphia
* Metropolitan Transportation Authority's
Metro-North Railroad, serving New York (
Yonkers and New York City) and Southwest Connecticut (
Bridgeport)
*
Metra, serving northeast Illinois (
Chicago),
Northern Indiana, and
Kenosha, Wisconsin
*
SEPTA Regional Rail, serving southeast Pennsylvania (Philadelphia), as well as
Wilmington, Delaware, and
Trenton, New Jersey
*
MBTA Commuter Rail, serving Massachusetts (Boston,
Worcester) and
Providence,
Rhode Island
*
Caltrain, serving California (
San Francisco,
San Jose, and the
San Francisco Peninsula)
*
Metrolink, serving California (
Los Angeles,
Burbank,
Anaheim,
San Bernardino, and
Southern California)
Other commuter rail systems in the United States (not in ridership order) are:
*
Utah Transit Authority FrontRunner, serving Utah (
Wasatch Front)
*
North County Transit District Coaster, serving California (
San Diego County)
*
Maryland Area Regional Commuter, serving
Maryland (
Baltimore) and
Washington, D.C.
*
Regional Transportation District, serving
Colorado (
Denver)
*
Virginia Railway Express, serving suburbs of
Northern Virginia and
Washington, D.C.
*
Sounder commuter rail, serving
Washington (
Seattle /
Tacoma)
*
Tri-Rail, serving
Florida (
Miami /
Fort Lauderdale /
West Palm Beach)
*
Trinity Railway Express, serving
Texas (
Dallas /
Fort Worth)
*
Westside Express Service, serving
Oregon (
Beaverton /
Wilsonville
*
Altamont Corridor Express, serving
California (
San Jose /
Stockton)
*
SunRail, serving
Florida (
Orlando/
Poinciana)
*
WES Commuter Rail, serving
Oregon (
Beaverton/
Willsonville)
*
New Mexico Rail Runner Express, serving
New Mexico (
Albuquerque)
*
Northstar Line, serving
Minnesota (
Big Lake and downtown
Minneapolis)
*
Capital MetroRail, serving
Texas (
Austin)
*
A-train, serving
Texas (
Denton County)
*
SMART, serving
California (
Sonoma and
Marin counties)
*
Music City Star, serving
Nashville and
Lebanon, Tennessee.
= Canada
=
*
GO Transit rail services in
Toronto
*
Exo in
Montreal
*
West Coast Express in
Vancouver
= Mexico
=
*
Suburban Railway of the Valley of Mexico Metropolitan Area serving
Mexico City
*
Toluca-México City commuter line serving
Toluca and
Mexico City
=Central America
=
*
City Rail serving
La Ceiba
*
San Salvador Suburban Rail serving
San Salvador and
Santa Ana
*
Rail Transport in Costa Rica serving
San Jose
South America

Examples include an commuter system in the
Buenos Aires metropolitan area, the long
Supervia in
Rio de Janeiro, the
Metrotrén in
Santiago,
Chile, and the
Valparaíso Metro in
Valparaíso, Chile. Another example is
Companhia Paulista de Trens Metropolitanos (CPTM) in
Greater São Paulo,
Brazil. CPTM has 94 stations with seven lines, numbered starting on 7 (the lines 1 to 6 and the line 15 belong to the
São Paulo Metro), with a total length of .
Oceania

The five major cities in Australia have suburban railway systems in their metropolitan areas. These networks have frequent services, with frequencies varying from every 10 to every 30 minutes on most suburban lines, and up to 3–5 minutes in peak on bundled underground lines in the city centres of Sydney, Brisbane, Perth and Melbourne. The networks in each state developed from mainline railways and have never been completely operationally separate from long distance and freight traffic, unlike
metro systems in some comparable countries, but nevertheless have cohesive identities and are the backbones of their respective cities' public transport system. The suburban networks are almost completely electrified.
The main suburban rail networks in Australia are:
*The
Sydney rail network operated by
Sydney Trains in
Sydney (with connected suburban services in
Newcastle and
Wollongong run by its counterpart intercity operator,
NSW TrainLink).
*The
Melbourne rail network operated by
Metro Trains Melbourne in
Melbourne.
*
V/Line operates some commuter services between Melbourne and surrounding towns, as well as between Melbourne and some locations within the Melbourne metropolitan area.
*The
Queensland Rail City network operated by
Queensland Rail in
Brisbane.
*
Transperth Trains in
Perth.
*The
Adelaide rail network operated by
Adelaide Metro in
Adelaide.
New Zealand has two frequent suburban rail services comparable to those in Australia: the
Auckland rail network is operated by
Transdev Auckland and the
Wellington rail network is operated by
Transdev Wellington.
See also
*
List of suburban and commuter rail systems
*
Public transport
*
Commuting
*
Cercanías, the commuter rail systems of Spain's major metropolitan areas
*
Commuter rail in the United Kingdom
*
Commuter rail in North America
*
Commuter rail in Australia
*
S-Bahn, the combined city center and suburban railway system metro in Austria, Germany, Switzerland and Denmark
References
External links
Commuter Rail & Transit NewsCurrent news concerning commuter rail development and issues
{{Portal bar|Transport
*