Seaford railway station is in Seaford, East Sussex, England. It is the terminus of the Seaford branch line of the East Coastway line, measured from . The line to the station has been reduced to a single track and only one platform remains in use (previously two), though it is still numbered platform 2. Platform 1 is still visible but the track has been removed.
Train services from the station are provided by Southern.
The London, Brighton & South Coast Railway opened Seaford station on 1 June 1864. It was designed as a through station for a proposed extension to that was never built.
A working model of Seaford Station as it appeared in the 1920s is displayed at Seaford Museum.
Signal box
At the end of the station, there was a signal box that was used until the mid-1980s. The box was damaged by the salt air from the nearby sea, and was dangerously unstable; it was demolished in February 2002.
Services
thumb|A at Seaford with a Southern service for
the typical off-peak service pattern is two trains per hour to via , seven days a week. Services are operated by Class 377s.
Gallery
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File:Seaford railway station building in 2009.jpg|The station building
File:Seaford railway station geograph-2982967-by-Ben-Brooksbank.jpg|Railway Correspondence & Travel Society Sussex rail tour in 1962
File:Seaford RCTS Sussex Rail Tour geograph-2983746-by-Ben-Brooksbank.jpg|A1X class 0-6-0T No. 32636 and E4 class 0-6-2T
</gallery>
