NJ Transit Rail Operations

NJ Transit Rail Operations (reporting mark NJTR) is the rail division of NJ Transit. It operates commuter rail service in New Jersey, with most service centered on transportation to and from New York City, Hoboken, and Newark. NJ Transit also operates rail service in Orange and Rockland counties in New York under contract to Metro-North Railroad. The commuter rail lines saw 59,447,200 riders in 2024, making it the third-busiest commuter railroad in North America and the longest commuter rail system in North America by route length.

NJ Transit Rail Operations
NJ Transit provides rail service throughout North Jersey & Central Jersey, while only 1 line provides service between Philadelphia and Atlantic City in South Jersey, and in the lower Hudson Valley west of the Hudson River.
Overview
Headquarters1 Penn Plaza East
Newark, New Jersey, U.S.
Reporting markNJTR
LocaleNorth Jersey, Central Jersey, White Horse Pike corridor, Hudson Valley
Dates of operation1983–present
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
ElectrificationOverhead line;
  • 25 kV 60 Hz AC
  • 12 kV 25 Hz AC
Route map

Legend
 Port Jervis 
 Spring Valley 
Otisville
Nanuet
Middletown–
Town of Wallkill
Pearl River
Campbell Hall
New York
New Jersey
Salisbury Mills–
Cornwall
Montvale
Harriman
Park Ridge
Tuxedo
Woodcliff Lake
Sloatsburg
Hillsdale
 Suffern 
Westwood
New York
New Jersey
Emerson
Mahwah
Oradell
Ramsey Route 17
River Edge
Ramsey
New Bridge Landing
Allendale
Anderson Street
 Waldwick 
Essex Street
Ho-Ho-Kus
Teterboro
Ridgewood
Wood-Ridge
Glen Rock–Boro Hall
 Meadowlands 
events
only
Glen Rock–Main Line
Radburn
Hawthorne
Broadway
Paterson
Plauderville
Clifton
Garfield
Passaic
Wesmont
Delawanna
Rutherford
Lyndhurst
Northeast Corridor
to Boston
Kingsland
 New York City 
Empire Corridor to Albany
Secaucus Junction
Hudson River
New York
New Jersey
 Hoboken 
Newark
Broad Street
Watsessing Avenue
East Orange
Bloomfield
Brick Church
Glen Ridge
Orange
 Bay Street 
Highland Avenue
Walnut Street
Mountain Station
Watchung Avenue
South Orange
Upper Montclair
Maplewood
Mountain Avenue
Millburn
Montclair Heights
Short Hills
 Montclair State U. 
Summit
Little Falls
Chatham
Wayne Route 23
Madison
Mountain View
Convent Station
Lincoln Park
Morristown
Towaco
Morris Plains
Boonton
Mount Tabor
Mountain Lakes
New Providence
Denville
Murray Hill
 Dover 
Berkeley Heights
Mount Arlington
Gillette
 Lake Hopatcong 
Stirling
planned
2026
 Andover 
Millington
Netcong
Lyons
 Mount Olive 
Basking Ridge
 Hackettstown 
Bernardsville
Far Hills
Peapack
 Gladstone 
Union
Roselle Park
Newark Liberty
International Airport
Cranford
North Elizabeth
Garwood
Elizabeth
Westfield
Linden
Fanwood
 Rahway 
Netherwood
Plainfield
Avenel
Dunellen
Woodbridge
Bound Brook
Perth Amboy
Bridgewater
South Amboy
Somerville
Aberdeen–Matawan
 Raritan 
Hazlet
North Branch
Middletown
White House
Red Bank
Lebanon
Little Silver
Annandale
Monmouth Park
seasonal
 High Bridge 
 Long Branch 
Metropark
Elberon
Metuchen
Allenhurst
Edison
Asbury Park
New Brunswick
Bradley Beach
Jersey Avenue
Belmar
North Brunswick
(under construction)
Spring Lake
 Princeton Junction 
Manasquan
 Princeton 
Point Pleasant Beach
Hamilton
 Bay Head 
 Trenton 
Amtrak Northeast Corridor
Keystone Corridor
to Harrisburg / Pittsburgh
 Philadelphia 
Delaware
River
Pennsylvania
New Jersey
Northeast Corridor
to Baltimore / Washington
Pennsauken
Cherry Hill
Lindenwold PATCO
Atco
Hammonton
Egg Harbor City
Absecon
 Atlantic City 
Key
Atlantic City Line
Morristown Line
Bergen County Line
North Jersey Coast Line
Gladstone Branch
Northeast Corridor Line
Lackawanna Cut-Off
Pascack Valley Line
Main Line
Port Jervis Line
Meadowlands Rail Line
Princeton Branch
Montclair-Boonton Line
Raritan Valley Line
 Terminus 
Amtrak
 Partial terminus 
limited service

History

The lines operated by NJ Transit were formerly operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad, Central Railroad of New Jersey, New York and Long Branch Railroad, and Erie Lackawanna Railroad, most of which date from the mid-19th century. From the 1960s onward, the New Jersey Department of Transportation began funding the commuter lines.

By 1976, the lines were all operated by Conrail under contract to NJDOT. NJDOT began rehabilitating the electrification systems on the current day Hoboken Division; this involved converting the system from 3 kV DC to 25 kV 60 Hz AC. Furthermore, Arrow III cars were ordered to replace the aging fleet of MUs inherited from the Erie Lackawanna Railroad.

Following the Northeast Rail Service Act of 1981 which required Conrail to abandon or transfer its commuter rail services to state agencies, NJ Transit Rail Operations took control of on January 1, 1983.

In 1984, the aforementioned rehabilitation project was finally completed. The Erie Lackawanna MUs were retired after their final run on August 23, 1984 and were replaced with Arrow IIIs.

In 1988, electrification was extended from Matawan to Long Branch on the North Jersey Coast Line.

1990s and 2000s

NJ Transit greatly expanded and consolidated its rail system in the 1990s and early 2000s.

On September 9, 1991, the Waterfront Connection opened allowing trains running on the Pennsylvania Railroad mainline to access Hoboken Terminal. Complementing the Waterfront Connection, the Kearny Connection opened on June 10, 1996 allowing M&E trains to access Penn Station. NJ Transit christened the new service as Midtown Direct.

On September 30, 2002, the Montclair Connection opened which connects the former end of the Montclair Branch to the old Boonton Line. This consolidated the Montclair Branch and Boonton Line operations; the new consolidated service was named the Montclair Boonton Line. Following this change, some trains were rerouted to terminate at Penn Station along with the opening of a yard at Great Notch.

Secaucus Junction was opened on December 15, 2003, connecting the two commuter networks in northern New Jersey for the first time. This allowed commuters on trains bound for Hoboken to transfer to New York Penn Station bound trains thus saving commuters an estimated 15 minutes transferring to PATH trains at Hoboken.

NJ Transit took over Clocker (NY-Philadelphia) service from Amtrak on October 31, 2005. While four trains were added to the schedule, service was cut back from Philadelphia to Trenton.

2010s

On September 29, 2016, Pascack Valley Line train #1614 overran the end of the track and went into the concourse coming to rest just before the waiting room wall. Both the terminal and the cabcar sustained major structural damage.

Network and infrastructure

The system took its current form in 1983, when NJ Transit took over all commuter service in New Jersey. NJ Transit Rail Operations is divided into the Hoboken Division and the Newark Division. The two networks were not integrated until the opening of Secaucus Junction in 2003, which enabled passengers to transfer between lines bound for New York and Hoboken.

Lines

As of 2022, NJ Transit's commuter rail network consists of 13 lines and 165 stations, primarily concentrated in northern & central New Jersey, with one line running in South Jersey between Atlantic City and Philadelphia.

Current lines

Operations are in two divisions:

  • Hoboken Division, formerly operated by the Erie Lackawanna Railroad, runs from Hoboken Terminal or through Newark – Broad Street and includes Midtown Direct service via the Kearny Connection. Most station platforms are low-level. Trains on the Hoboken division are pulled by ALP-45DP or diesel locomotives like F40s, GP40s and PL42ACs with trains using either Comet V or Multilevel Cars while electric trains use Arrow III EMUs. Midtown Direct trains use ALP-46, ALP-45DP, Multilevel, and Comet IIM, IV, & V cars.
  • Newark Division, formerly operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad, Central Railroad of New Jersey and New York and Long Branch Railroad, operates through Newark Penn Station via the Northeast Corridor, with most trains continuing to New York Penn Station. This division also includes the Atlantic City Line formerly operated by the Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines. Most station platforms are high-level. Trains on the Newark division are usually pulled by ALP-45DP, ALP-46, PL42AC and GP40s with trains using either Multilevel or Comet IIM, IV, & V cars.
Newark Division
Lines Terminals
 Northeast Corridor Line  New York Penn Station Trenton
Jersey Avenue (some peak weekday trains)
 Princeton Branch  Princeton Junction Princeton
 North Jersey Coast Line  New York Penn Station
Long Branch (electric service)
Bay Head (diesel service)
 Raritan Valley Line  Newark Penn Station (most trains)
New York Penn Station (limited weekday trains)
Hoboken Terminal (1 inbound weekday train)
Raritan (most trains)
High Bridge (limited weekday trains)
 Atlantic City Line  Philadelphia 30th Street Station Atlantic City
Hoboken Division
Lines Terminals
 Main Line  Hoboken Terminal Suffern
 Bergen County Line  Suffern (weekday service)
Waldwick (weekend service)
 Pascack Valley Line  Spring Valley
 Port Jervis Line  Port Jervis
 Meadowlands Rail Line  Secaucus Junction
Hoboken Terminal (limited service)
Meadowlands
 Montclair-Boonton Line  Hoboken Terminal
New York Penn Station (Midtown Direct service)
Montclair State University (weekday electric service)
Hackettstown (limited weekday diesel service)
Bay Street (weekend service)
 Morristown Line  Dover (electric service)
Hackettstown (limited weekday diesel service)
 Gladstone Branch  Hoboken Terminal (weekday service)
New York Penn Station (Midtown Direct service, weekdays only)
Summit (weekend service)
Gladstone

Freight usage

Although NJ Transit itself does not carry freight, NJTR allows freight service to be operated over its lines via trackage rights agreements with several railroads. Conrail Shared Assets Operations (CSAO), CSX, Norfolk Southern (NS) and several short lines (Cape May Seashore Lines (CMSL), Dover and Delaware River Railroad (DD), Morristown & Erie Railway (M&E), and Southern Railroad of New Jersey (SRNJ) currently have trackage rights contracts to operate freight service on NJ Transit lines. The Morristown & Erie Railway can only use NJT trackage to get between its owned trackage; it cannot serve customers on NJ Transit trackage. A similar situation exists for Conrail on the Atlantic City Line.

Below is a list of NJ Transit lines and freight lines that operate on them:

  • Morristown Line: DD, M&E
  • Montclair-Boonton Line: DD, M&E
  • Main Line: NS, M&E
  • Bergen County Line: NS, M&E
  • Pascack Valley Line: NS
  • Raritan Valley Line: CSAO
  • North Jersey Coast Line: CSAO
  • Atlantic City Line: CSAO, SRNJ

Non-passenger lines

NJTR also owns several lines not used for regular passenger service. These lines were purchased by the New Jersey Department of Transportation in the late 1970s for railbanking purposes, with ownership transferring to NJ Transit upon its creation in 1979. These lines are either leased for freight/tourist service, interim rail trail use, or remain derelict:

  • Harrison-Kingsland Branch: derelict
  • Raritan Valley Line:
    • High Bridge-Bloomsbury: NS
    • Bloomsbury-Phillipsburg: trackage removed due to construction of Interstate 78 in 1989
  • Red Bank -South Lakewood: Conrail Shared Assets Operations (CSAO), Delaware and Raritan River Railroad
  • Woodmansie-Winslow Junction: derelict
  • Beesley's Point Secondary:
    • Winslow Junction-Palermo/Beesley's Point: CSAO, Cape May Seashore Lines
    • Palermo-Ocean City: leased to city of Ocean City in 1999 for use as interim Ocean City Bike Path rail trail
  • Tuckahoe-Cape May: Cape May Seashore Lines
  • HX Interlocking (Hackensack River)-Croxton Yard: realigned for Secaucus Junction, used as yard lead by NS
  • Freehold-Farmingdale: derelict
  • Freehold-Matawan: leased to Monmouth County Park System until 2020 as interim section of Henry Hudson Trail

Ownership

NJT owns most of its tracks, infrastructure, bridges, tunnels and signals. The exceptions are:

  • Atlantic City Line – Philadelphia 30th Street Station to Frankford Junction (owned by Amtrak) and Frankford Junction to Pennsauken Delair Junction (owned by Conrail)
  • Northeast Corridor Line – entire line except Morrisville Yard (owned by Amtrak)
  • Port Jervis Line – Suffern to Port Jervis (owned by Norfolk Southern and leased by Metro-North)
  • Raritan Valley Line – Aldene to Hunter (owned by Conrail)

Yards and maintenance

NJ Transit's main storage and maintenance facility is the Meadows Maintenance Complex in Kearny, New Jersey. Other major yard facilities are located at Hoboken Terminal. Amtrak's Sunnyside Yard in Queens, New York serves as a layover facility for trains to New York Penn Station. Additional yards are located at outlying points along the lines. These include:

  • Main and Bergen County Lines:
    • Waldwick Yard
    • Suffern Yard
  • Montclair-Boonton Line:
    • Great Notch Yard, Little Falls
  • Morris and Essex Lines:
    • Gladstone Yard
    • Summit Yard
    • Dover Yard
    • Port Morris Yard
  • North Jersey Coast Line:
    • Long Branch Yard
    • Bay Head Yard
  • Northeast Corridor:
    • Morrisville Yard, Morrisville, PA (near the Trenton Transit Center)
    • County Yard, New Brunswick (near Jersey Avenue)
    • Hudson Yard, Harrison (Serves mostly Raritan Valley Line trains)
  • Pascack Valley Line:
    • Woodbine Yard, Spring Valley, NY
  • Port Jervis Line:
    • Port Jervis Yard, Port Jervis, NY
  • Raritan Valley Line:
    • Raritan Yard
    • Hudson Yard, Harrison (Shared with Northeast Corridor)

NJT has a fleet of maintenance crews and vehicles that repair tracks, spread ballast, deliver supplies and inspect infrastructure. There are eight non-revenue work diesels used for these purposes.

Movable bridges

NJT utilizes numerous moveable bridges:

  • Dock Bridge, Newark (Passaic River) – Northeast Corridor Line (vertical lift) (owned and operated by Amtrak)
  • Portal Bridge, Secaucus (Hackensack River) – Northeast Corridor Line (swing) (owned and operated by Amtrak)
    • Portal North Bridge is a replacement adjacent to original Portal Bridge
  • Newark Draw, Newark (Passaic River) – Morristown Line (swing)
  • Lower Hack Lift, Jersey City (Hackensack River) – Morristown Line (vertical lift)
  • Upper Hack Lift, Secaucus (Hackensack River) – Main Line (vertical lift)
  • HX Draw, Secaucus (Hackensack River) – Bergen County Line and Pascack Valley Line (bascule)
  • Lyndhurst Draw, Lyndhurst (Passaic River) – Main Line (swing)
  • River Draw, South Amboy (Raritan River) – North Jersey Coast Line (swing)
  • Morgan Draw, Old Bridge (Cheesequake Creek) – North Jersey Coast Line (bascule)
  • Oceanport Draw, Oceanport (Oceanport Creek) – North Jersey Coast Line (swing)
  • Shark River Draw, Belmar (Shark River) – North Jersey Coast Line (bascule)
  • Brielle Draw, Brielle (Manasquan River) – North Jersey Coast Line (bascule)
  • Beach Bridge, Atlantic City (Beach Thorofare) – Atlantic City Line (swing)
  • Delair Bridge, Pennsauken (Delaware River) – Atlantic City Line (vertical lift) (owned and operated by Conrail)

Rolling stock

NJ Transit operates a fleet of 175 locomotives and over 1,200 passenger cars.

Locomotives

Builder and model Photo Numbers Number active Type Built
EMD GP40PH-2 4100, 4101, 4109 3 Diesel 1968
EMD GP40PH-2B 4200–4219 19 1965–1969
EMD F40PH-2CAT 4119, 4120 2 1981
Alstom PL42AC 4000–4032 29 2005–2006
Bombardier ALP-46 4600–4628 29 Electric 2001–2002
Bombardier ALP-46A 4629–4664 36 2010–2011
Bombardier ALP-45DP 4500–4534 60 Dual-mode
(electric and diesel)
2011–2012
Bombardier/Alstom ALP-45A 4535-4559 2021–present

Passenger cars

NJ Transit has a fleet of over 1,100 passenger cars. The fleet and examples are described below.

Builder and model Photo Numbers Total Built
GE Arrow III 1304–1333 30 single cars (no lavatory) 1977
1334–1533 200 paired cars (lavatory in odd cars)
Bombardier Comet II 5300–5460 161 trailers (no lavatories) 1982–1989
Bombardier Comet IV 5011–5031 21 cab cars (lavatory) 1996
5235–5264 30 trailers (lavatory)
5535–5582 48 trailers (no lavatory)
Alstom Comet V 6000–6083 84 cab cars (lavatory) 2002–2004
6200–6213 14 trailers (lavatory)
6500–6601 102 trailers (no lavatory)
Bombardier MultiLevel Coach 7000–7051 52 cab cars (lavatory) 2006–2010
7200–7298 99 trailers (lavatory)
7500–7677 178 trailers (no lavatory)
Bombardier MultiLevel Coach II 7052–7061 10 cab cars (lavatory) 2012–2013
7678–7767 90 trailers (no lavatory)

Stations

NJ Transit provides passenger service on 12 lines at total of 165 stations, some of which are operated in conjunction with Amtrak and Metro-North (MNCW).

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