Seaford Railway Station, located in East Sussex, serves as the terminus of the Seaford branch line of the East Coastway line, extending 94.9 km from London Bridge. This station, which opened on 1 June 1864, was originally part of the London, Brighton & South Coast Railway. It was initially designed as a through station for a proposed extension to Eastbourne, a plan that was never realised.
Today, Seaford Station operates with a single track and retains only one of its original two platforms, with the other track having been removed. The operational platform is still numbered as platform 2. The station is managed by Southern, which provides a typical off-peak service of two trains per hour to Brighton via Lewes, available seven days a week. The station building and its surroundings reflect a rich history, including a period model of the station as it appeared in the 1920s, displayed at the Seaford Museum.