The Tōkaidō Main Line () is one of the most important railway corridors in Japan, connecting the major cities of Tokyo and Kobe via Shizuoka, Nagoya, Kyoto and Osaka. The line, with termini at Tokyo and Kobe stations, is long, not counting its many freight feeder lines around the major cities. The high-speed Tōkaidō Shinkansen largely parallels the line.
The term "Tōkaidō Main Line" is largely a holdover from pre-Shinkansen days; now various portions of the line have different names which are officially used by JR East, JR Central, and JR West. Today, the only daily passenger train that travels the entire length of the line is the combined Sunrise Izumo/Sunrise Seto service which runs overnight. During the day, longer intercity trips using the line require several transfers along the way.
The Tōkaidō Main Line is owned and operated by three Japan Railways Group (JR Group) companies:
- East Japan Railway Company (JR East) ( - ) - Tōkaidō Line
- Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central) ( - ) - Tōkaidō Line
- West Japan Railway Company (JR West) ( - ) - Biwako Line, JR Kyōto Line, JR Kōbe Line
History
Completion and early days, 1872–1913
left|thumb|Train hauled by a [[JGR Class 160 locomotive at Shimbashi Station, ]]
The Tōkaidō route takes its name from the ancient road connecting the Kansai region (Kyoto, Osaka) with the Kantō region (Tokyo, then Edo) through the Tōkai region (including Nagoya). Its name meant "Tōkai road", or the road running through Tōkai. The Tōkaidō Line does not follow the old road exactly, since the latter diverges at Nagoya toward the Mie Prefecture coastline; to follow it by train, the Kansai Main Line and Kusatsu Line would have to be followed from Nagoya to Kusatsu. Japan's largest population centers are all along this route: Tokyo, Yokohama, Nagoya, Kyoto, Osaka, and Kobe. Since construction of the line, these centers have since grown to occupy an ever more dominant role in the country's government, financial, manufacturing, and cultural life.
Historically, one of the first priorities of Japanese railway planners was to build a line from Tokyo to the Kansai region, either following the Tōkaidō route or the northern Nakasendō route. This decision remained unresolved as regional needs were addressed. The first railway in Japan was the line from Shimbashi to Sakuragicho in Yokohama, which opened in 1872; another segment of today's Tokaido Main Line, between Kyoto and Kobe, opened in 1877.
In 1883, the government decided to use the Nakasendō route, and construction of several segments commenced (including the modern-day Takasaki Line). Railways were opened between Ogaki and Nagahama (1884) and between Nagoya and Kisogawa (1886) in line with the Nakasendo plan. However, by 1886, it was clear that the Tōkaidō route would be more practical, and so the Nakasendo plan was abandoned.]]
The lines between Kisogawa and Ogaki, Yokohama and Kozu, and Hamamatsu and Obu were completed in 1887, and the first line from Tokyo to Kobe was completed in 1889, when Kozu and Hamamatsu were connected through the present-day Gotemba Line corridor. The final segments were completed between Kasumigahara and Otsu. At the time, there was one Tokyo–Kobe train in each direction per day, taking over 20 hours each way. The "Tokaido Line" name was formally adopted in 1895. In October 1895, following the Sino-Japanese War, through service to the Sanyo Railway (now the San'yō Main Line) began. With the opening of the tunnel, the section between Tokyo and Numazu was fully electrified, as steam locomotives were unable to operate through the long tunnel safely.
thumb|[[52 series|52 Series EMUs were used for commuter services between Kyoto and Kobe following the electrification of the section.]]
Electrification also progressed on the other end of the line around the same time, in 1934. Commuter rapid services between Kyoto and Kobe, using 52 Series streamliner EMUs, began in 1937. However, further electrification of the line was overshadowed by the Second World War and did not resume until after the war. For security reasons, the army preferred to keep the middle portion of the line unelectrified, as unelectrified tracks were much easier to repair in the event of an enemy attack.
During the war, the line's focus shifted towards freight services. Express services were significantly reduced, and sleepers and restaurant cars were withdrawn from service in 1944. JNR Class D52 locomotives were introduced for wartime freight transport, but their poor manufacturing quality led to several boiler explosion accidents.
As the main transport artery of postwar Japan, 1945–1964
thumb|[[JNR Class C62 hauling the Tsubame near Kyoto, ]]
In the immediate aftermath of the war, almost all surviving express train carriages were requisitioned by the Allied Occupation Forces. Services such as the Allied Limited (Tokyo–Moji), Dixie Limited (Tokyo–Hakata), and the BCOF Train (Tokyo–Kure) operated on the Tōkaidō Line. Express trains for Japanese nationals resumed in April 1947, with sleeper services following in July 1948.
In 1949, the Limited Express Heiwa, a successor to the pre-war Tsubame service, and the sleeper express Ginga both began operating between Tokyo and Osaka. In January 1950, Heiwa was renamed Tsubame. Makeshift D52 freight locomotives were converted into C62 express locomotives, the largest and fastest steam engines in Japan's rail history, to haul these services. One of the C62s, C62 17, holds the narrow-gauge steam world speed record, which was achieved on the Tōkaidō Line near Nagoya on 15 December 1954, and is preserved at the SCMaglev and Railway Park.
On 19 November 1956, the line was fully electrified. The Tokyo–Osaka express trains, Tsubame and Hato, began to be hauled by JNR EF58 locomotives for the entire length of the route, reducing travel time from 8 hours to 7 hours and 30 minutes. With no concerns about smoke polluting the carriages, these trains were painted light green and nicknamed Aodaishō (green snakes, referring to the Japanese rat snake).
On 1 October 1958, the Kodama, the first limited express service operated by EMUs rather than locomotive-hauled carriages, commenced. This service further reduced travel time to 6 hours and 50 minutes. The Series 151 EMUs marked a significant milestone in railway technology, as EMUs were previously considered unsuitable for high-speed and long-distance services due to issues like noise, vibration, and cost. Since then, all non-sleeper express rolling stock, including the Shinkansen, has been designed as EMUs. On the same day, the Asakaze sleeper express entered service with the newly built Series 20 carriages. These carriages were fully air-conditioned and nicknamed the 'hotel on the rail'. Because these sleeper carriages and their successors were painted blue, sleeper trains in Japan came to be known as Blue Trains.
After the opening of the Tōkaidō Shinkansen, 1964–1987
The capacity constraints on the Tōkaidō Main Line had been clear prior to World War II, and work started on a new standard gauge "bullet train" line in 1959. Intercity passenger traffic between Tokyo, Nagoya and Osaka largely transferred to the Tōkaidō Shinkansen after it was completed in 1964. Since then, the Tōkaidō Main Line has been used as a commuter and freight line, serving a very small number of long-distance passenger trains (mainly overnight and sleeper services).
Privatisation, 1987–present
Following the Hanshin earthquake on 17 January 1995, the line was shut down between Takatsuki and Kobe, with certain segments remaining impassable until 1 April of that year.
On 20 August 2016, station numbering was introduced, with stations between Tokyo and Ōfuna assigned station numbers of JT01 to JT07. Numbers increase towards in the southbound direction towards Ōfuna. Station numbers would be assigned to stations beyond Ōfuna as far as Atami in 2018.
On the evening of 5 August 2023, a JR East Tōkaidō Line service struck a utility pole near and lost power, resulting in a suspension of service. Four people, including the driver, sustained minor injuries. Service was restored on the morning of 6 August 2023.
Basic data
- Total distance: (including branch lines; Tokyo – Kōbe is )
- East Japan Railway Company (JR East) (Services and tracks)
- Tokyo – Atami:
- Shinagawa – Shin-Kawasaki – Tsurumi:
- Hamamatsuchō – Tokyo Freight Terminal – Kawasaki Freight Terminal – Hama-Kawasaki: (Tōkaidō Freight Line)
- Tsurumi – Hatchō-Nawate: (Tōkaidō Freight Line)
- Tsurumi – Higashi-Takashima – Sakuragichō: (Takashima Line)
- Tsurumi – Yokohama-Hazawa – Higashi-Totsuka: (Tōkaidō Freight Line)
- Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central) (Services and tracks)
- Atami – Maibara: ( between Kanayama – Nagoya overlaps with Chuo Main Line)
- Ōgaki – Mino-Akasaka: (Mino-Akasaka branch line)
- Ōgaki – (Shin-Tarui) – Sekigahara: (Shin-Tarui Line)
- West Japan Railway Company (JR West) (Services and tracks)
- Maibara – Kōbe:
- Kyōto Freight Terminal – Tambaguchi: (not in use by passenger trains)
- Suita – (Miyahara Rail Yard) – Amagasaki: (Hoppō Freight Line)
- Suita – Umeda – Fukushima: (Umeda Freight Line, used by Haruka and Kuroshio limited expresses)
- Japan Freight Railway Company (JR Freight) (Tracks and services)
- Sannō Signal – Nagoya-Minato: (Nagoya-Minato Line)
- Suita Signal – Osaka Freight Terminal: (Osaka Terminal Line)
- Japan Freight Railway Company (JR Freight) (Services only)
- Shinagawa – Atami:
- Shinagawa – Shin-Tsurumi Signal:
- Tokyo Freight Terminal – Hama-Kawasaki:
- Tsurumi – Yokohama-Hazawa – Higashi-Totsuka:
- Tsurumi – Hatchō-Nawate:
- Tsurumi – Shinkō – Sakuragichō:
- Atami – Maibara:
- Minami-Arao Signal – Sekigahara:
- Minami-Arao Signal – Mino-Akasaka:
- Maibara – Kōbe: (via Hoppō Freight Line)
- Kyōto Freight Terminal – Tambaguchi:
- Suita – Umeda – Fukushima:
- Gauge: Narrow gauge railway
- Stations:
- Passenger: 166 (does not include Shinagawa – Shin-Kawasaki – Tsurumi section or branches other than Mino-Akasaka branch line)
- JR East: 34
- JR Central: 82
- JR West: 50
- Freight only: 14
- Tracks:
- Four or more
- Tokyo – Odawara:
- Nagoya – Inazawa:
- Kusatsu – Kōbe:
- Two
- Odawara – Nagoya
- Inazawa – Kusatsu
- Shinagawa – Shin-Kawasaki – Tsurumi
- Hamamatsuchō – Tokyo Freight Terminal – Kawasaki Freight Terminal – Hama-Kawasaki
- Tsurumi – Hatchō-Nawate
- Tsurumi – Higashi-Takashima
- Tsurumi – Yokohama-Hazawa – Higashi-Totsuka
- Suita – Umeda
- Suita – (Miyahara Rail Yard) – Amagasaki
- Single-track: All other sections
- Electrification: 1,500 V DC (except for Sannō Signal – Nagoya-Minato)
- Railway signalling: Automatic Train Control
- Maximum speed:
- Tokyo – Ōfuna, Odawara – Toyohashi:
- Ōfuna – Odawara, Toyohashi – Maibara:
- Minami-Arao Signal – Tarui – Sekigahara, Minami-Arao Signal – Mino-Akasaka:
- Maibara – Kōbe: (Special Rapid Shin-Kaisoku only, local trains max at 120 km/h or 75 mph)
Station list
JR East
The section between Tokyo and Atami is operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East) and it is located in the Greater Tokyo Area. It has local services () and a rapid service called Rapid Acty (). It runs on dedicated tracks parallel to the Yamanote Line between Tokyo and Shinagawa, the Keihin–Tōhoku Line between Tokyo and Yokohama, and the Yokosuka Line between Yokohama and Ōfuna. Some Shōnan–Shinjuku Line trains share the segment south of Yokohama to Ōfuna and Odawara. Until 12 March 2021, there were also commuter rapid () and Shōnan Liner () services.
The Ueno–Tokyo Line, a JR East project, extended the services of the Utsunomiya Line, the Takasaki Line, and the Joban Line to Tokyo Station, allowing for through services to and from the Tōkaidō Line from March 2015.
Almost all trains along this section of the line have bi-level "Green Cars" with forward-facing seats, with each set of trains having 2 of them. Green Cars can be used after paying an additional fee.
A new station between Ōfuna and Fujisawa is being planned to serve passengers near the former JR Freight Shōnan Freight Terminal. Construction is expected to start in early 2022. The new station is expected to open for service in 2032.
Legend:
- ● : All trains stop
- | : All trains pass
- ▲ : Shōnan–Shinjuku Line trains use Yokosuka Line platforms
{| class="wikitable sortable sticky-header-multi" style="font-size:90%;"
!rowspan="2" class=unsortable|No.
!rowspan="2" class=unsortable|Station
!colspan="2" class=unsortable|Distance (km)
!rowspan="2" class=unsortable|Local,<br />Rapid Rabbit<br />& Urban
!style="background:#beb" rowspan="2" class=unsortable|Jōban Line through service
!colspan="2" class=unsortable|Shōnan–Shinjuku Line
!rowspan="2" class=unsortable|Transfers
!rowspan="2" colspan=2 class=unsortable|Location
|-
!class=unsortable|Between<br />Stations
!class=unsortable|Total
!class=unsortable style="background:#fbb"|Rapid
!class=unsortable style="background:#89d9ff"|Special Rapid
|-
| colspan="4" rowspan="2" style="text-align:right; border-bottom:3px solid #0B8E0E" |Through service from/to:
| colspan="2" | Ueno-Tokyo Line
| colspan="2" rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:3px solid #0B8E0E"| Shōnan-Shinjuku Line (for Takasaki Line)
| colspan="3" rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:3px solid #0B8E0E"|
|-
| style="border-bottom:3px solid #0B8E0E"| Utsunomiya<br />& Takasaki Line
| style="border-bottom:3px solid #0B8E0E"| Jōban Line (Rapid)
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"| -
|style="text-align:right"|0
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#beb" |●
|colspan="2" rowspan="4" style="text-align:center"|
|
|Chiyoda
| rowspan="3" |Tokyo
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|1.9
|style="text-align:right"|1.9
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#beb" |●
| Yamanote Line<br /> Keihin-Tōhoku Line<br /> Yokosuka Line<br /> Tokyo Metro Ginza Line <br /> Toei Asakusa Line <br />
| rowspan="2" |Minato
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|4.7
|style="text-align:right"|6.8
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#beb" |●
| Yamanote Line<br /> Keihin-Tōhoku Line<br /> Yokosuka Line<br />17x17px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br /> Keikyu Main Line
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|11.4
|style="text-align:right"|18.2
|style="text-align:center"|●
| rowspan="19" |
| Keihin-Tōhoku Line<br /> Nambu Line<br /> Keikyu Main Line<br> Keikyū Daishi Line
|Kawasaki-ku, Kawasaki
| rowspan="18" |Kanagawa
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|10.6
|style="text-align:right"|28.8
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb" |▲
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff" |▲
| Keihin-Tōhoku Line, Negishi Line<br /> Yokohama Line<br /> Shōnan-Shinjuku Line<br /> Yokosuka Line<br /> Tōkyū Tōyoko Line<br /> Keikyu Main Line<br />link=|20x20px Sotetsu Main Line<br />link=|20x20px Yokohama Municipal Subway Blue Line<br />link=|20x20px Minatomirai Line
|Nishi-ku, Yokohama
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|12.1
|style="text-align:right"|40.9
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb" |▲
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff" |▲
| Shōnan-Shinjuku Line<br /> Yokosuka Line<br /> link=|20x20px Yokohama Municipal Subway Blue Line
|Totsuka-ku, Yokohama
|-
| rowspan="2" |
| rowspan="2" |
| rowspan="2"style="text-align:right"|5.6
| rowspan="2"style="text-align:right"|46.5
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center"|●
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center; background:#fbb" |●
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff" |●
| rowspan="2" |
|Sakae-ku, Yokohama
|-
|Kamakura
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|4.6
|style="text-align:right"|51.1
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff"|●
|
|rowspan="2"|Fujisawa
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|3.7
|style="text-align:right"|54.8
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff"||
|
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|3.8
|style="text-align:right"|58.6
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff"|●
| <span style="color:#339999">■</span> Sagami Line
|Chigasaki
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|5.2
|style="text-align:right"|63.8
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff"|●
|
|Hiratsuka
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|4.0
|style="text-align:right"|67.8
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff"||
|
|Ōiso, Naka District
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|5.3
|style="text-align:right"|73.1
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff"||
|
|Ninomiya, Naka District
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|4.6
|style="text-align:right"|77.7
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff"|●
|link=|20x20px Gotemba Line
|rowspan=5|Odawara
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|3.1
|style="text-align:right"|80.8
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff"||
|
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|3.1
|style="text-align:right"|83.9
|style="text-align:center"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#fbb"|●
|style="text-align:center; background:#89d9ff"|●
|
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|2.1
|style="text-align:right"|86.0
|style="text-align:center"|●
| rowspan="5" |
| rowspan="5" |
|
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|4.4
|style="text-align:right"|90.4
|style="text-align:center"|●
|
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|5.4
|style="text-align:right"|95.8
|style="text-align:center"|●
|
|Manazuru, Ashigarashimo District
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|3.3
|style="text-align:right"|99.1
|style="text-align:center"|●
|
|Yugawara, Ashigarashimo District
|-
|
|
|style="text-align:right"|5.5
|style="text-align:right"|104.6
|style="text-align:center"|●
| Itō Line (Some through trains for )<br />17x17px Tōkaidō Shinkansen
|Atami
|Shizuoka
|-
! colspan="11" |Local: Some operate through service from/to or
|}
- Some trains run through services beyond Atami, as far as Numazu.
- With the Ueno–Tokyo Line, Utsunomiya Line Rapid Rabbit and Takasaki Line Rapid Urban services now run along the Tōkaidō Line, and stop at all stations on this line. As such, the two services are classified as 'Local' service trains within the Tōkaidō Line.
- Tōkaidō Line Rapid Acty services operate only evening services from Tokyo to Odawara. Rapid Acty services will be discontinued effective the timetable revision on 18 March 2023 after 34 years of operation.
- Shōnan Limited Express services are special, all-reserved commuter express trains with comfortable seating. They operate from Odawara to Tokyo on weekday mornings, with a few services terminating in Shinagawa. Return services run from Tokyo to Odawara on weekday evenings. Like commuter rapid trains, Shōnan Liner services normally make no stops between Shinagawa and Fujisawa. Between Fujisawa and Odawara, varying stops are made. In addition to the standard fare, a reserved seat fee of ¥500 is required to use the Shōnan Liner.
- Keihin-Tōhoku Line stations between Tokyo and Yokohama officially are a part of the Tōkaidō Main Line. These stations are: , , , , , , , , , and .
- Yokosuka Line stations between Tokyo and Ōfuna officially are a part of the Tōkaidō Main Line. These stations are: , , , , and . The route of the Yokosuka Line between Shinagawa and Tsurumi is separate from the main line and is referred to as the Hinkaku Line, on which Nishi-Ōi, Musashi-Kosugi, and Shin-Kawasaki stations are located.
- The Shōnan–Shinjuku Line operates through services to the Tōkaidō Main Line. Trains operate from the Takasaki Line to and enter the Yokosuka Line at to then switches tracks to the Tōkaidō Main Line towards , and vice versa. Rapid Service stop at all stations on the Tōkaidō Main Line (Totsuka - Odawara), while Special Rapid Service operate the same pattern as a Rapid Acty Service.
JR Central
The point between JR East and JR Central operation is divided at Atami Station. The section of the line between Atami and Maibara is operated by JR Central, and covers the Tōkai region: Shizuoka Prefecture, Aichi Prefecture, and Gifu Prefecture. Some services from Odawara on the JR East section continues to travel on this section until Numazu Station.
Shizuoka Block
{| class="wikitable" rules="all"
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|No.
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|Station
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|Japanese
!colspan="2"|Distance (km)
!colspan="4"|Rapid Services
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|Home Liner
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|Transfers
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2" colspan="2"|Location
|-
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Between<br />Stations
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Total<br />(From<br />Tokyo)
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Semi<br />Rapid
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Rapid
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|New<br />Rapid
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Special<br />Rapid
|-
|
|Atami
|熱海
|align="right"|
|align="right"|104.6
|
|
|
|
|
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br /> Itō Line
|Atami
|rowspan="41"|Shizuoka
|-
|
|Kannami
|函南
|align="right"|9.9
|align="right"|114.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Kannami, Tagata District
|-
|
|Mishima
|三島
|align="right"|6.2
|align="right"|120.7
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br /> Izuhakone Railway Sunzu Line (some morning/evening through services)
|Mishima
|-
|
|Numazu
|沼津
|align="right"|5.5
|align="right"|126.2
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Gotemba Line
|rowspan="3"|Numazu
|-
|
|Katahama
|片浜
|align="right"|4.1
|align="right"|130.3
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Hara
|原
|align="right"|2.5
|align="right"|132.8
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Higashi-Tagonoura
|東田子の浦
|align="right"|4.6
|align="right"|137.4
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan=4|Fuji
|-
|
|Yoshiwara
|吉原
|align="right"|3.9
|align="right"|141.3
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
| Gakunan Railway Line
|-
|
|Fuji
|富士
|align="right"|4.9
|align="right"|146.2
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Minobu Line
|-
|
|Fujikawa
|富士川
|align="right"|3.5
|align="right"|149.7
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Shin-Kambara
|新蒲原
|align="right"|2.8
|align="right"|152.5
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan="6"|Shimizu-ku, Shizuoka
|-
|
|Kambara
|蒲原
|align="right"|2.4
|align="right"|154.9
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Yui
|由比
|align="right"|3.5
|align="right"|158.4
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Okitsu
|興津
|align="right"|5.9
|align="right"|164.3
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Shimizu
|清水
|align="right"|4.7
|align="right"|169.0
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|-
|
|Kusanagi
|草薙
|align="right"|5.2
|align="right"|174.2
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|Shizuoka Railway Shizuoka-Shimizu Line
|-
|
|Higashi-Shizuoka
|東静岡
|align="right"|3.5
|align="right"|177.7
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan=2|Aoi-ku, Shizuoka
|-
|
|Shizuoka
|静岡
|align="right"|2.5
|align="right"|180.2
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />Shizuoka Railway Shizuoka-Shimizu Line ()
|-
|
|Abekawa
|安倍川
|align="right"|4.3
|align="right"|184.5
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan="2"|Suruga-ku, Shizuoka
|-
|
|Mochimune
|用宗
|align="right"|2.1
|align="right"|186.6
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Yaizu
|焼津
|align="right"|7.1
|align="right"|193.7
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan="2"|Yaizu
|-
|
|Nishi-Yaizu
|西焼津
|align="right"|3.3
|align="right"|197.0
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Fujieda
|藤枝
|align="right"|3.3
|align="right"|200.3
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|Fujieda
|-
|
|Rokugō
|六合
|align="right"|4.6
|align="right"|204.9
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan="3"|Shimada
|-
|
|Shimada
|島田
|align="right"|2.9
|align="right"|207.8
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|-
|
|Kanaya
|金谷
|align="right"|5.1
|align="right"|212.9
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|Oigawa Railway Oigawa Main Line
|-
|
|Kikugawa
|菊川
|align="right"|9.3
|align="right"|222.2
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|Kikugawa
|-
|
|Kakegawa
|掛川
|align="right"|7.1
|align="right"|229.3
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />Tenryū Hamanako Railroad
|Kakegawa
|-
|
|Aino
|愛野
|align="right"|5.3
|align="right"|234.6
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan=2|Fukuroi
|-
|
|Fukuroi
|袋井
|align="right"|3.5
|align="right"|238.1
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|-
|
|Mikuriya
|御厨
|align="right"|4.6
|align="right"|242.7
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
| rowspan="3"|Iwata
|-
|
|Iwata
|磐田
|align="right"|3.2
|align="right"|245.9
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|-
|
|Toyodachō
|豊田町
|align="right"|2.9
|align="right"|248.8
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Tenryūgawa
|天竜川
|align="right"|3.9
|align="right"|252.7
|
|
|
|
|style="text-align: center"||
|
| rowspan="5" |Chūō-ku, Hamamatsu
|-
|
|Hamamatsu
|浜松
|align="right"|4.4
|align="right"|257.1
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />Enshū Railway Line ()
|-
|
|Takatsuka
|高塚
|align="right"|5.3
|align="right"|262.4
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|-
|
|Maisaka
|舞阪
|align="right"|5.1
|align="right"|267.5
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|-
|
|Bentenjima
|弁天島
|align="right"|2.3
|align="right"|269.8
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|-
|
|Araimachi
|新居町
|align="right"|3.1
|align="right"|272.9
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|rowspan="3"|Kosai
|-
|
|Washizu
|鷲津
|align="right"|3.7
|align="right"|276.6
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|-
|
|Shinjohara
|新所原
|align="right"|5.8
|align="right"|282.4
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|Tenryū Hamanako Railroad
|-
|
|Futagawa
|二川
|align="right"|4.3
|align="right"|286.7
|
|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|rowspan="2"|Toyohashi
|rowspan="33"|Aichi
|-
|
|Toyohashi
|豊橋
|align="right"|6.9
|align="right"|293.6
|style="text-align: center"|
|style="text-align: center"|
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />20px Iida Line<br /> Meitetsu Nagoya Main Line<br />Toyohashi Railroad Atsumi Line (), Toyohashi Railroad Azumada Main Line ()
|}
Nagoya Block Main Line
{| class="wikitable" rules="all"
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|No.
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|Station
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|Japanese
!colspan="2"|Distance (km)
!colspan="4"|Rapid Services
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|Home Liner
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2"|Transfers
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;" rowspan="2" colspan="2"|Location
|-
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Between<br />Stations
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Total<br />(From<br />Tokyo)
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Semi<br />Rapid
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Rapid
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|New<br />Rapid
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #F68B1E;"|Special<br />Rapid
|-
|
|Toyohashi
|豊橋
|align="right"|6.9
|align="right"|293.6
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />20px Iida Line<br /> Meitetsu Nagoya Main Line<br />Toyohashi Railroad Atsumi Line (), Toyohashi Railroad Azumada Main Line ()
|Toyohashi
| rowspan="32" |Aichi
|-
|
|Nishi-Kozakai
|西小坂井
|align="right"|4.8
|align="right"|298.4
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan="2"| Toyokawa
|-
|
|Aichi-Mito
|愛知御津
|align="right"|3.7
|align="right"|302.1
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|
|三河大塚
|align="right"|3.1
|align="right"|305.2
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan="4"|Gamagori
|-
|
|Mikawa-Miya
|三河三谷
|align="right"|3.1
|align="right"|308.3
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|▲
|style="text-align: center"|▲
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Gamagōri
|蒲郡
|align="right"|2.3
|align="right"|310.6
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
| Meitetsu Gamagōri Line
|-
|
|Mikawa-Shiotsu
|三河塩津
|align="right"|2.3
|align="right"|312.9
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
| Meitetsu Gamagōri Line ()
|-
|
|Sangane
|三ヶ根
|align="right"|2.6
|align="right"|315.5
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan=3|Kōta, Nukata District
|-
|
|Kōda
|幸田
|align="right"|3.0
|align="right"|318.5
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|▲
|style="text-align: center"|▲
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|
|相見
|align="right"|3.1
|align="right"|321.6
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Okazaki
|岡崎
|align="right"|7.4
|align="right"|325.9
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
| Aichi Loop Line
|rowspan=2|Okazaki
|-
|
|Nishi-Okazaki
|西岡崎
|align="right"|4.2
|align="right"|330.1
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Anjō
|安城
|align="right"|3.6
|align="right"|333.7
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|rowspan=2|Anjō
|-
|
|Mikawa-Anjō
|三河安城
|align="right"|2.6
|align="right"|336.3
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen
|-
|
|Higashi-Kariya
|東刈谷
|align="right"|1.8
|align="right"|338.1
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan="4"|Kariya
|-
|
|Noda-Shimmachi
|野田新町
|align="right"|1.6
|align="right"|339.7
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Kariya
|刈谷
|align="right"|1.9
|align="right"|341.6
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
| Meitetsu Mikawa Line
|-
|
|Aizuma
|逢妻
|align="right"|1.9
|align="right"|343.5
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Ōbu
|大府
|align="right"|3.0
|align="right"|346.5
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Taketoyo Line
|rowspan="2"|Ōbu
|-
|
|Kyōwa
|共和
|align="right"|3.0
|align="right"|349.5
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|
|南大高
|align="right"|2.3
|align="right"|351.8
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan=2|Midori-ku, Nagoya
|-
|
|Ōdaka
|大高
|align="right"|1.8
|align="right"|353.6
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Kasadera
|笠寺
|align="right"|3.2
|align="right"|356.8
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|Minami-ku, Nagoya
|-
|
|Atsuta
|熱田
|align="right"|4.0
|align="right"|360.8
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|Atsuta-ku, Nagoya
|-
|
|Kanayama
|金山
|align="right"|1.9
|align="right"|362.7
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Chūō Main Line<br /> Meitetsu Nagoya Main Line<br />Nagoya Municipal Subway:<br />20px Meijō Line (M01)<br />20px Meikō Line (E01)
|Naka-ku, Nagoya
|-
|
|Otōbashi
|尾頭橋
|align="right"|0.9
|align="right"|363.6
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|Nakagawa-ku, Nagoya
|-
|
|Nagoya
|名古屋
|align="right"|2.4
|align="right"|366.0
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />20px Kansai Main Line<br />20px Chūō Main Line<br /> Kintetsu Nagoya Line ()<br /> Meitetsu Nagoya Main Line ()<br />Nagoya Municipal Subway:<br />20px Higashiyama Line (H08)<br />20px Sakura-dōri Line (S02)<br /> Aonami Line (AN01)
|Nakamura-ku, Nagoya
|-
|
|Biwajima
|枇杷島
|align="right"|4.0
|align="right"|370.0
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
| JR-Central Transport Service Jōhoku Line
|Kiyosu
|-
|
|Kiyosu
|清洲
|align="right"|3.8
|align="right"|373.8
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|rowspan=2|Inazawa
|-
|
|Inazawa
|稲沢
|align="right"|3.3
|align="right"|377.1
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Owari-Ichinomiya
|尾張一宮
|align="right"|6.0
|align="right"|383.1
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
| Meitetsu Nagoya Main Line, Meitetsu Bisai Line ()
|rowspan=2|Ichinomiya
|-
|
|Kisogawa
|木曽川
|align="right"|3.5
|align="right"|388.6
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Gifu
|岐阜
|align="right"|7.7
|align="right"|396.3
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Takayama Main Line<br /> Meitetsu Nagoya Main Line, Meitetsu Kagamihara Line ()
|rowspan="2"|Gifu
|rowspan="6"|Gifu
|-
|
|Nishi-Gifu
|西岐阜
|align="right"|3.2
|align="right"|399.5
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"||
|
|-
|
|Hozumi
|穂積
|align="right"|1.0
|align="right"|400.5
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|Mizuho
|-
|
|Ōgaki
|大垣
|align="right"|9.5
|align="right"|410.0
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|20px Tōkaidō Main Line (Mino-Akasaka, Shin-Tarui branch lines)<br /> Yōrō Railway Yōrō Line<br /> Tarumi Railway Tarumi Line
|Ōgaki
|-
|
|Tarui
|垂井
|align="right"|8.1
|align="right"|418.1
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|Tarui, Fuwa District
|-
|
|Sekigahara
|関ヶ原
|align="right"|5.7
|align="right"|423.8
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|Tōkaidō Main Line (Shin-Tarui branch line)
|Sekigahara, Fuwa District
|-
|
|Kashiwabara
|柏原
|align="right"|7.1
|align="right"|430.9
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|rowspan="4"|Maibara
|rowspan="4"|Shiga
|-
|
|Ōmi-Nagaoka
|近江長岡
|align="right"|4.3
|align="right"|435.2
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|-
|
|Samegai
|醒ヶ井
|align="right"|4.6
|align="right"|439.8
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|
|-
|
|Maibara *
|米原
|align="right"|6.1
|align="right"|445.9
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|style="text-align: center"|●
|
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />20px Hokuriku Main Line<br />20px Biwako Line (Tōkaidō Main Line)<br /> Ohmi Railway Main Line
|}
Maibara is shared by JR Central and JR West; JR West manages the station
Before March 2016, JR West operated trains from Maibara as far as Ogaki on JR Central territory. From 25 March 2016, all JR West departures were changed to JR Central trains to Maibara station.
Branch lines
thumb|400px|right|Track diagram around Minami-arao Junction
thumb|400px|right|Track diagram between Ōgaki and Sekigahara
Both the Mino-Akasaka and Tarui branch lines separate from the Main Line at , located 3.1 km west of Ōgaki Station.
Mino-Akasaka Branch Line
{| class="wikitable" rules="all"
!rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Station
!rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Japanese
!colspan="2"|Distance (km)
!rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Transfers
!colspan="2" rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Location
|-
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Between<br />Stations
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Total (from Ōgaki)
|-
|Ōgaki
|大垣
|align="right"|-
|align="right"|0.0
| Tōkaidō Main Line
|rowspan="3"|Ōgaki
|rowspan="3"|Gifu
|-
|Arao
|荒尾
|align="right"|3.4
|align="right"|3.4
|
|-
|Mino-Akasaka
|美濃赤坂
|align="right"|1.6
|align="right"|5.0
|
|-
|}
All trains on the Mino-Akasaka Branch Line operate as a shuttle service between and . Services operate approximately every 45 minutes during morning and evening peak hours, but there are large gaps between services of 2-3 hours during the day. Running time is 7 minutes.
Tarui Branch Line
Between Ōgaki and Sekigahara, there is a 25 per mil grade. In 1944, a single track bypass (in orange on the diagram) was built to avoid this steep slope of the main line. The old section, informally referred to as the "Shin-Tarui Line", remains largely unused, and was closed in 1986. Today, the only rail vehicles that travel on this section of track are freight trains and westbound express trains (the Shirasagi, Hida #36, and Sunrise Seto/Izumo services).
{| class="wikitable" rules="all"
!rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Station
!rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Japanese
!colspan="2"|Distance (km)
!rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Transfers
!colspan="2" rowspan="2" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Location
|-
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Between<br />Stations
!style="border-bottom:solid 3px #FFA500;"|Total (from Ōgaki)
|-
|Ōgaki
|大垣
|align="right"|-
|align="right"|0.0
|Tōkaidō Main Line
|Ōgaki
|rowspan="3"|Gifu
|-
|Tarui
|垂井
|align="right"|8.1
|align="right"|8.1
|
|Tarui, Fuwa District
|-
|Sekigahara
|関ヶ原
|align="right"|5.7
|align="right"|13.8
|JR Central: Tōkaidō Main Line
|Sekigahara
|-
|}
JR West
The western part of the Tōkaidō Main Line from Maibara to Kōbe is operated by JR West and forms the main trunk of the company's Urban Network in the Osaka-Kobe-Kyoto metropolitan area. Although the line is divided into three segments, known as the Biwako Line, JR Kyoto Line, and JR Kobe Line, they are part of a single contiguous network, with many services traversing multiple sections. The Biwako Line includes a segment of the Hokuriku Main Line. Some services on the Kosei, JR Takarazuka and Gakkentoshi lines run through onto the Tōkaidō Main Line.
Biwako Line
The section between Maibara and Kyoto is known as the Biwako Line.
- ●: Trains stop.
- ○: Limited stop, early morning and late night only
- <nowiki>|</nowiki>: Trains pass.
- Local (4-door Commuter trains): JR Kyoto Line local trains
- Local (3-door Suburban trains): Operate as Rapid service trains west of Takatsuki (west of Kyoto in the morning)
{| class=wikitable
! rowspan="2" |Official line name
!rowspan=2 |No.
!rowspan=2 |Station
!rowspan=2 |Japanese
! colspan="2" |Distance (km)
! colspan="3" |Stop
!rowspan=2 |Transfers
!colspan=2|Location
|-
!Between Stations
!Total
(from Tokyo)
!Local<br />(Commuter)
!Local<br />(Suburban)
!Special Rapid
!Ward, City
!Prefecture
|-
! colspan="12" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #0072bc;" |Through service from/to Hokuriku Main Line
|-
| rowspan="20" |Tōkaidō Main Line
|
|
|米原
| -
|445.9
| rowspan="9" |
|●
|●
|20px Hokuriku Main Line for Ōmi-Shiotsu and Tsuruga
JR Central:
- 20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen
- 20px Tōkaidō Line for Gifu and Nagoya (CA83)
Ohmi Railway Main Line
|Maibara
| rowspan="18" |Shiga
|-
|
|
|彦根
|6.0
|451.9
| style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
| Ohmi Railway Main Line
| rowspan="4" |Hikone
|-
|
|
|南彦根
|3.3
|455.2
| style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|
|河瀬
|3.1
|458.3
| style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|
|稲枝
|3.7
|462.0
| style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|
|能登川
|3.7
|465.7
| style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|
|Higashiōmi
|-
|
|
|安土
|5.1
|470.8
| style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
| rowspan="3" |Ōmihachiman
|-
|
|
|近江八幡
|3.5
|474.3
| style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
| Ohmi Railway Yōkaichi Line
|-
|
|
|篠原
|4.0
|478.3
| style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|
|野洲
|5.6
|483.9
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |○
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|
|Yasu
|-
|
|
|守山
|3.1
|487.0
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |○
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|
|Moriyama
|-
|
|
|栗東
|2.1
|489.1
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |○
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|Rittō
|-
|
|
|草津
|2.3
|491.4
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px Kusatsu Line
| rowspan="2" |Kusatsu
|-
|
|
|南草津
|2.5
|493.9
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|
|-
|
|
|瀬田
|2.7
|496.6
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
| rowspan="4" |Ōtsu
|-
|
|
|石山
|2.5
|499.1
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px|OT Keihan Ishiyama Sakamoto Line (OT03: Keihan Ishiyama Station)
|-
|
|
|膳所
|2.8
|501.9
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|20px|OT Keihan Ishiyama Sakamoto Line (OT09: Keihan Zeze Station)
|-
|
|
|大津
|1.7
|503.6
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|
|-
|
|
|山科
|4.5
|508.1
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px Kosei Line (JR-B30)<br />20px Kyoto Municipal Subway Tōzai Line (T07)<br />20px|OT Keihan Keishin Line (OT31: Keihan Yamashina Station)
|Yamashina-ku, Kyoto
| rowspan="2" |Kyoto
|-
|
|
|京都
|5.5
|513.6
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />20px JR Kyoto Line<br />20px Nara Line (JR-D01)<br />20px Sagano Line (Sanin Main Line) (JR-E01)<br />20px Kintetsu Kyoto Line (B01)<br />20px Kyoto Municipal Subway Karasuma Line (K11)
|Shimogyo-ku, Kyoto
|-
! colspan="12" |Through service from/to JR Kyoto Line
|-
| colspan="4" |Within JR Kyoto Line:
|
|
| style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center" |Local
(Northbound only)
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|Rapid
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|Special Rapid
| colspan="3" |
|}
JR Kyoto Line
The section between Kyoto and Osaka is known as the JR Kyoto Line. Trains from the Biwako and Kosei lines travel through onto the JR Kyoto Line and continue west towards the JR Kobe Line at Osaka.
Legend:
- ● : All trains stop
- | : All trains pass
- ▲ : Trains only after morning rush stop
Local trains stop at all stations. Rapid trains in the morning skip some stops between Kyoto and Takatsuki.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! rowspan="2" |Official Line Name
! rowspan="2" |No.
! rowspan="2" |Station
! rowspan="2" |Japanese
! rowspan="2" |Distance (km)
! colspan="2" |Stops
! rowspan="2" |Transfers
! colspan="2" |Location
|-
!Rapid
!Special Rapid
!Ward, City
!Prefecture
|-
! colspan="10" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #0072bc;"|Through services from Biwako Line and Kosei Line
|-
| rowspan="17" |Tōkaidō Main Line
|
|||京都
| style="text-align:right" |0.0
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />20px Biwako Line<br />20px Kosei Line ()<br />20px Nara Line ()<br />20px Sagano Line ()<br />20px Kintetsu Kyoto Line (B01)<br /> 20px Kyoto Municipal Subway Karasuma Line (K11)
|Shimogyō-ku, Kyoto
| rowspan="6" |Kyoto
|-
|
|||西大路
| style="text-align:right" |2.5
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|▲
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
| rowspan="2" |Minami-ku, Kyoto
|-
|
|||桂川<br />(久世)
| style="text-align:right" |5.3
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|▲
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|||向日町
| style="text-align:right" |6.4
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|▲
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|Mukō
|-
|
|Nagaokakyō||長岡京
| style="text-align:right" |10.1
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|Nagaokakyō
|-
|
|||山崎
| style="text-align:right" |14.1
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|▲
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|Ōyamazaki
|-
|
|||島本
| style="text-align:right" |16.3
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|▲
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|Shimamoto
| rowspan="11" |Osaka
|-
|
|||高槻
| style="text-align:right" |21.6
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|
| rowspan="2" |Takatsuki
|-
|
|||摂津富田
| style="text-align:right" |24.5
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|||JR総持寺
| style="text-align:right" |26.2
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
| rowspan="2" |Ibaraki
|-
|
|||茨木
| style="text-align:right" |28.2
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|||千里丘
| style="text-align:right" |31.1
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|Settsu
|-
|
|||岸辺
| style="text-align:right" |32.8
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
| rowspan="2" |Suita
|-
|
|||吹田
| style="text-align:right" |35.2
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|||東淀川
| style="text-align:right" |38.3
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
| rowspan="2" |Yodogawa-ku, Osaka
|-
|
|||新大阪
| style="text-align:right" |39.0
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px Tōkaidō Shinkansen<br />20px San'yō Shinkansen<br />20px Osaka Higashi Line ()<br /> Osaka Metro Midōsuji Line (M13)
|-
|
|||大阪
| style="text-align:right" |42.8
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px JR Kōbe Line<br /> 20px JR Takarazuka Line ()<br /> 20px Osaka Loop Line ()<br /> 20px Osaka Higashi Line ()<br />20px JR Tōzai Line (:Kitashinchi Station)<br /> 20px Hankyū Kōbe Main Line, 20px Hankyu Takarazuka Main Line, 20px Hankyu Kyoto Main Line (HK-01:Osaka-umeda Station)<br /> 20px Hanshin Main Line (HS 01:Osaka-Umeda Station)<br /> Osaka Metro: <br /> Midōsuji Line (M16: Umeda Station)<br /> Tanimachi Line (T20: Higashi-Umeda Station)<br /> Yotsubashi Line (Y11: Nishi-Umeda Station)
|Kita-ku, Osaka
|- style="text-align: center; "
! colspan="10" |Through services on JR Kobe Line
Through services on JR Takarazuka Line (Local only)
|}
JR Kobe Line
The westernmost section between Osaka and Kōbe is part of the JR Kobe Line, which continues west to on the San'yō Main Line. Although Kōbe is the official terminus of the Tōkaidō Main Line, most trains continue to Nishi-Akashi, Himeji and beyond.
●: Trains stop at all times<br />
|: Trains pass at all times<br />
{| class=wikitable
!rowspan=2 |Official line name
!rowspan=2 |No.
!rowspan=2 |Station
!rowspan=2 |Japanese
!colspan=2|Distance (km)
!colspan=3|Stop
!rowspan=2|Transfers
!colspan=2|Location
|-
!Between stations
!from Osaka
!Local
!Rapid
!Special Rapid
!Ward, City
!Prefecture
|-
!colspan="12" align="center" style="border-bottom:solid 3px #0072bc;"|Through service to/from the JR Kyoto Line
|-
|rowspan="17"|Tōkaidō Main Line
|
|
|大阪
|align="right"|-
|align="right"|0.0
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px JR Kyoto Line (Tōkaidō Main Line)<br /> 20px JR Takarazuka Line (JR-G47)<br /> 20px Osaka Loop Line (JR-O11)<br /> 20px Osaka Higashi Line (JR-F01)<br /> 20px JR Tōzai Line (JR-H44:Kitashinchi Station)<br /> 20px Hankyu Kobe Main Line, 20px Hankyu Takarazuka Main Line, 20px Hankyu Kyoto Main Line (HK-01:Osaka-umeda Station)<br /> 20px Hanshin Main Line (HS 01:Osaka-Umeda Station)<br /> Osaka Metro:
- Midōsuji Line (M16: Umeda Station)
- Tanimachi Line (T20: Higashi-Umeda Station)
- Yotsubashi Line (Y11: Nishi-Umeda Station)
|Kita-ku, Osaka
|rowspan=2|Osaka
|-
|
|
|塚本
|align="right"|3.4
|align="right"|3.4
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|Yodogawa-ku, Osaka
|-
|
|
|尼崎
|align="right"|4.3
|align="right"|7.7
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px JR Takarazuka Line (Fukuchiyama Line) (JR-G49)<br /> 20px JR Tōzai Line (JR-H49)
|rowspan=2|Amagasaki
| rowspan="15" |Hyōgo
|-
|
|
|立花
|align="right"|3.0
|align="right"|10.7
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|
|甲子園口
|align="right"|2.2
|align="right"|12.9
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|rowspan=3|Nishinomiya
|-
|
|
|西宮
|align="right"|2.5
|align="right"|15.4
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|
|さくら夙川
|align="right"|1.5
|align="right"|16.9
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|
|芦屋
|align="right"|2.3
|align="right"|19.2
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|
|Ashiya
|-
|
|
|甲南山手
|align="right"|1.4
|align="right"|20.6
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|rowspan=3|Higashinada-ku, Kobe
|-
|
|
|摂津本山
|align="right"|1.5
|align="right"|22.1
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|Sumiyoshi
|住吉
|align="right"|1.6
|align="right"|23.6
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|Kobe New Transit Rokko Island Line (R01)
|-
|
|
|六甲道
|align="right"|2.2
|align="right"|25.9
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|rowspan=3|Nada-ku, Kobe
|-
|
|
| 摩耶
|align="right"|1.4
|align="right"|27.3
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|
|灘
|align="right"|0.9
|align="right"|28.2
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|
|-
|
|
|三ノ宮
|align="right"|2.4
|align="right"|30.6
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
|20px Hankyu Kobe Line, 20px Kobe Kosoku Line (HK-16: Kobe Sannomiya Station)<br />20px Hanshin Main Line (HS 32: Kobe Sannomiya Station)<br />20px Kobe New Transit Port Island Line (P01)<br />20px Kobe Municipal Subway Seishin-Yamate Line (S03: Sannomiya Station)<br />20px Kobe Municipal Subway Kaigan Line (K01: Sannomiya-Hanadokeimae Station)
| rowspan="3" |Chuo-ku, Kobe
|-
|
|
|元町
|align="right"|0.8
|align="right"|31.4
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|<nowiki>|</nowiki>
|20px Hanshin Main Line, 20px Kobe Kosoku Line (HS 33)
|-
|
|
|神戸
| align="right" |1.7
| align="right" |33.1
|style="background-color:#d3d3d3;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●
|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●
| 20px Hanshin Kobe Kosoku Line, Hankyu Kobe Kosoku Line (HS 35: Kōsoku Kōbe Station)<br />20px Kobe Municipal Subway Kaigan Line (K04: Harborland Station)
|-
!colspan="12" align="center"|Through service to/from the San'yō Main Line and the Ako Line
|}
Former connecting lines
thumb|The handcar line near Yoshihama (see Atami Station)
thumb|The Yoshihama line after conversion to steam power, circa 1920
thumb|Mishima-Tamachi Station circa 1914 (see Numazu Station)
thumb|Mukogawa Station in 1944, note the dual-gauge track (see Nishinomiya Station)
Kanagawa Prefecture
- Ninomiya Station: The Shonan Horse-drawn Tramway opened a line to Hatano in 1906 to haul tobacco. Steam locomotion was introduced in 1913. Passenger services ceased in 1933, and the line closed in 1935.
- Odawara Station: The Japan Tobacco and Salt Public Corporation operated an approximately 1 km line to its factory, electrified at 1,500 V DC, between 1950 and 1984. The line was also serviced by the adjoining Odakyu Odawara Line from its Ashigara station.
Shizuoka Prefecture
- Atami Station: In 1895, a gauge handcar line opened to Yoshihama, and was extended to Odawara the following year. In 1907, the line was converted to gauge and steam locomotives were introduced. The line closed in 1923 as a result of the Great Kanto earthquake.
- Numazu Station: The Sunzu Electric Railway opened a line to Mishima-Tamachi on the Izuhakone Railway Sunzu Line in 1906. In 1915, the line was truncated 1 km to connect at Mishima-Hirokoji, and the line was electrified at 600 V DC in 1919. The line closed in 1961 following the destruction of the Kisegawa bridge during a flood.
- Yoshiwara Station: The opened a gauge line to Ōmiya (presentday Fujinomiya) in 1890. The purchased the tramway in 1912, converted it to a gauge steam railway the following year and gradually extended it (eventually becoming the Minobu Line). In 1924, the company built a new alignment which connected to Fuji station on the Tōkaidō Main Line, at which time the original section from Omiya to Yoshiwara closed.
- Shimizu Station: Shimizukō Line from 1916 to 1984.
- Shizuoka Station:
- The Abe Railway opened a gauge line from Inomiya (approximately 2 km from Shizuoka) to Ushizuma in 1914 to haul timber. Plans to extend the line to Shizuoka did not eventuate and the line closed in 1934.
- The Shizuoka Electric Railway opened a line to Anzai, connecting to its Shimizu Line, electrified at 600 V DC, between 1922 and 1926. The line closed in 1962.
- Yaizu Station: A handcar line operated to Fujieda between 1891 and 1900.
- Fujieda Station: The Tōsō Railway opened a gauge line to Ote in 1913, and by 1926 had extended the line progressively in both directions for a length of from Jitogata to Suruga-Okabe, although in 1936 the section from Suruga-Okabe to Ote was closed. In 1943, the company merged with the Shizuoka Railway (see Fujiroi Station below), and in 1948, a line between Mitsumata and Jitogata opened, linking the two sections. This section of the combined line closed between 1964 and 1970.
- Shimada Station: The Fuji Prefectural Government opened a gauge handcar line in 1898 to haul timber. In 1944, following the destruction of the nearby Tōkaidō Line bridge over the Oigawa, it was proposed to use the alignment of this line as a replacement, including a wooden bridge over the river. The bridge was about 25% completed when the end of the war resulted in the termination of the proposal. A diesel locomotive was introduced in 1955 to haul construction material for the construction of the adjacent national highway, and the line closed in 1959.
- Kikukawa Station: The Joto horse-drawn tramway opened a gauge line to Ikeshinden in 1899. In 1923, the line was converted to gauge, and a single-cylinder diesel locomotive introduced. The line closed in 1935.
- Fukuroi Station:
- The Akiba horse-drawn tramway opened a gauge line to Enshumori-Cho in 1902. In 1926, the company renamed itself the Shizuoka Electric Railway, converted the line to gauge and electrified it at 600 V DC. The line closed in 1962.
- The Shizuoka Railway opened a gauge line to Yokosuka in 1914, extending it to Mitsumata in 1927. The company merged with the Fuji-sho Railway in 1943 (see Fujieda Station above), and in 1948, a line between Mitsumata and Jitogata opened, linking the two sections. This section of the combined line closed between 1964 and 1967.
- Hamamatsu Station: The Dainippon Railway opened a , gauge line to Kuniyoshi in 1909. In 1919, the line was acquired by the Enshu Railway Line, which closed the first of the line in 1925, so the new connecting station became Enshu-Magome. The line closed in 1937 while the section to Enshu-Magome would close in 1985.
Aichi Prefecture
- Okazaki Station:
- The Nishio Railway opened a gauge line to Nishio in 1911, and extended it to Kira-Yoshida on the Meitetsu Gamagōri Line between 1915 and 1916. In 1926, the company merged with the Aichi Electric Railway, which between 1928 and 1929 converted the line to gauge, electrified it at 600 V DC, and connected it to the line from Shin-Anjō on the Meitetsu Nagoya Main Line at Nishioguchi. The line to Nishio closed in 1962.
- A tram line connected to the Meitetsu Koromo line at Okazaki-Ida Station, which between 1929 and 1962 connected to the Meitetsu Mikawa Line at Uwagoromo, the tramway also closing in 1962.
- Owari-Ichinomiya Station: The Meitetsu line to Okoshi, electrified at 600 V DC, opened in 1924. When the voltage on the Meitetsu main line was increased to 1,500 V DC in 1952, services were suspended on this line. The substitute bus service proved so popular the line was closed rather than upgraded.
Gifu Prefecture
- Ogaki Station: The Seino Railway opened a line from Mino-Akasaka to Ichihashi in 1928, and operated a passenger service from 1930 to 1945.
- Arao Station (on the Mino Akasaka branch): A freight-only line to the Mino Okubo limestone quarry operated between 1928 and 1990.
Hyōgo Prefecture
- Nishinomiya Station: A freight-only line was opened in 1944 to connect to Mukogawa Station on the Hanshin Main Line. As the former was gauge, and the latter gauge, some tracks at Mukogawa were dual gauge. Service on the line ceased in 1958, but it was not formally closed until 1970.
- Rokkomichi Station: A line to Kobe Port opened in 1907, electrified at 1,500 V DC. Passenger services ceased in 1974, and the line closed in 2003.
Limited express services
In addition to standard local, rapid, and special rapid service trains, the Tōkaidō Main Line also hosts a number of limited express services.
Daytime trains
- Biwako Express: Maibara – Osaka
- Fujikawa: Shizuoka – Fuji – (Minobu Line) – Kōfu
- Haruka: Yasu - Kyoto – Shin-Osaka – (Osaka Loop Line) – Tennōji – (Hanwa Line) – Hineno – (Kansai Airport Line) – Kansai International Airport
- Hida: Nagoya / Osaka – Gifu – (Takayama Main Line) – Toyama
- Odoriko: Tokyo – Atami – (Itō Line) – Itō – (Izu Kyūkō) – Shimoda; Tokyo – Mishima – (Izuhakone Railway Sunzu Line) – Shuzenji
- Thunderbird: Osaka – Kyoto – (Kosei Line) – Tsuruga
- Saphir Odoriko: Tokyo – Atami – (Itō Line) – Itō – (Izu Kyūkō) – Izukyu-Shimoda
- Shirasagi: Nagoya – Maibara – (Hokuriku Main Line) – Tsuruga
- Shōnan: Tokyo – Odawara
Overnight trains
Overnight trains on the Tōkaidō Line go from Tokyo to western Honshū and Shikoku.
- Sunrise Izumo (Tokyo – Izumo via Okayama) (Operates daily)
- Sunrise Seto (Tokyo – Takamatsu) (Operates daily)
Discontinued trains
- Overnight limited express Sakura (Tokyo – Nagasaki (discontinued March 2005), Tokyo – (discontinued 1999))
- Overnight limited express Izumo (Tokyo – Izumo via Tottori), discontinued March 2006
- Limited express Wide View Tōkai (Tokyo – Shizuoka), discontinued March 2007
- Overnight express Ginga (Tokyo – Osaka), discontinued March 2008
- Overnight limited express Fuji (Tokyo – Ōita), discontinued March 2009
- Overnight limited express Hayabusa (Tokyo – Kumamoto), discontinued March 2009
- Overnight limited express Sunrise Yume (Tokyo – Hiroshima), discontinued March 2009
- Moonlight Nagara (Tokyo – Ōgaki) (Operates seasonally - rapid service with reserved seats), discontinued March 2020
- Super View Odoriko, Resort Odoriko, Fleur Odoriko (Tokyo – Izukyu-Shimoda), discontinued March 2020
Rolling stock for local and rapid services
JR East
thumb|JR East E231-1000 series
- E231-1000 series (Tokyo – Atami – Numazu, through services onto the Itō Line)
- E233-3000 series (Tokyo – Atami – Numazu, through services onto the Itō Line)
- E257-2000/2500 series (Odoriko, Shōnan: Ikebukuro/Tokyo – Atami, through service onto the Itō Line)
- E261 series (Saphir Odoriko: Shinjuku/Tokyo – Atami, through service onto the Itō Line)
JR Central
thumb|JR Central 313 series
- 211-5000 series (Atami – Toyohashi, through services onto the Gotemba Line)
- 211-6000 series (Atami – Toyohashi, through services onto the Gotemba Line, through services onto the Minobu Line)
- 313-0 series (Hamamatsu – Toyohashi – Gifu – Ōgaki)
- 313-300 series (Hamamatsu – Toyohashi – Gifu – Ōgaki, Ōgaki – Mino-Akasaka)
- 313-2300 series (Atami – Toyohashi, through services onto the Gotemba Line, through services onto the Minobu Line)
- 313-2500 series (Atami – Toyohashi, through services onto the Gotemba Line, through services onto the Minobu Line)
- 313-2600 series (Atami – Toyohashi, through services onto the Gotemba Line, through services onto the Minobu Line)
- 313-3000 series (through services onto the Gotemba Line, through services onto the Minobu Line)
- 313-3100 series (through services onto the Gotemba Line, through services onto the Minobu Line)
- 313-5000 series (Hamamatsu – Toyohashi – Gifu – Ōgaki – Maibara)
- 373 series (Atami – Shizuoka, Hamamatsu – Toyohashi, Ōgaki – Maibara)
- HC85 series (Nagoya / Osaka – Gifu, through service on the Takayama Main Line)
JR West
thumb|JR West 223-2000 series
- 681 series (Nagoya – Ōgaki – Sekigahara)
- 683-8000 series (Nagoya – Ōgaki – Sekigahara)
- 271 series (Yasu – Shin-Osaka)
- 281 series (Yasu – Shin-Osaka)
- 207 series (Kusatsu – Kobe)
- 321 series (Kusatsu – Kobe)
- 221 series (Maibara – Kobe)
- 223 series (Maibara – Kobe)
- 225 series (Maibara – Kobe)
Former rolling stock
- KiHa 75 (through services onto the Taketoyo Line, 1999 - March 2015)
- KiHa 85 series (Nagoya / Osaka – Gifu, through service on the Takayama Main Line, 1989 – 9 July 2023)
- 113-1000 series (April 1972 - March 2006)
- 185 series (Tokyo – Atami, Misima through services onto the Itō Line, March 1981 - March 2021)
- 211 series (Tokyo – Atami – Numazu, through services onto the Itō Line, 1985 - April 2012)
- 215 series (Tokyo – Atami, 1992 - March 2021)
- E217 series (Tokyo – Atami, March 2006 - March 2015)
- 251 series (Ikebukuro/Tokyo, Atami, through service onto the Itō Line, April 1990 - March 2020)
- 311 series (Shizuoka – Kakegawa – Hamamatsu – Toyohashi – Gifu, until 2025)
- 651 series (Izu Craile services: Odawara – Atami, through service onto the Itō Line, July 2016 - June 2020)
<gallery class="center">
File:Jre E217F.jpg|E217 series in Tōkaidō Line Shōnan livery, April 2007
File:113sayonara.jpg|A 113 series approaching Yokohama, March 2006.
</gallery>
References
External links
- Stations of the Tōkaidō Main Line (JR East)
