Metrorail Western Cape
| Metrorail Western Cape Region | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Metrorail logo | |||
A Metrorail X'Trapolis Mega train running near Kalk Bay station. | |||
| Overview | |||
| Owner | PRASA | ||
| Locale | |||
| Transit type | Commuter rail | ||
| Number of lines | 5 | ||
| Number of stations | As of March 2025: Operational: 104 Total: 121 | ||
| Annual ridership | 22.7 million (2025 financial year)[1] | ||
| Chief executive | Raymond Maseko (Regional Manager)[2] | ||
| Website | www | ||
| Operation | |||
| Operator(s) | Metrorail | ||
| Character | Suburban railway | ||
| Rolling stock | |||
| Number of vehicles | 85 trainsets (1,094 coaches) | ||
| Technical | |||
| System length | 460 km (290 mi) | ||
| Track gauge | 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) | ||
| Electrification | 3 kV DC overhead catenary | ||
| Top speed | 90 km/h (56 mph) | ||
| |||
Metrorail Western Cape is a commuter rail system operating in the Cape Town metropolitan area and surrounds, in the Western Cape province of South Africa. The system operates as a division of the national PRASA, and forms part of the broader national Metrorail network.
The system serves the City of Cape Town, Drakenstein, Stellenbosch, and Swartland. It connects central Cape Town with areas such as Malmesbury, Paarl, Stellenbosch, Wellington, Strand, Mitchells Plain, Khayelitsha, and Simon’s Town. Some areas, including the Atlantic Seaboard, Durbanville, and parts of Blouberg do not have rail access.
Annual ridership totaled 22.7 million passengers for the 2025 financial year.[1]
History
Push for direct management in Cape Town
In 2017, the City of Cape Town suggested that it be allowed to directly manage the local Metrorail network. This followed years of decline in passenger numbers while the system was managed by the national Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (PRASA). The City criticized PRASA's management of what it said was the foundation of Cape Town's public transit system.[3]
An investigation into the feasibility of the city running the local rail network instead of PRASA found that the City could not only return the rail service to 2012 passenger levels, but could also build new lines and provide around 54,000 new housing units on vacant or underutilized land around the city's 92 train stations. The City also said it could properly manage the 48 hectares of leasable land that was managed by PRASA, and turn them into economic hubs.[3]
As rail service quality continued to decline under the network's management by PRASA, the City of Cape Town's push for direct management of the system within its jurisdiction continued to increase. Indicative of the system's decline, the total number of trips operated by PRASA in Cape Town on an average weekday decreased from 444 in 2019 to 153 in 2022 (a 65.5% decline in three years).[4]
In April 2022, Mayor of Cape Town Geordin Hill-Lewis announced that the National Treasury had given its support for a feasibility study into the City of Cape Town managing its own Metrorail network. Hill-Lewis noted the significant decline in PRASA rail services, highlighting the fact that the total number of train sets in operation had declined from 95 in 1995 to just 33 in 2020.[4]
The Mayor confirmed that a tender had been issued by the City to operate the Metrorail system within the metro's jurisdiction. He further stated that the Constitution of South Africa supported the city's push to manage its own rail network. Hill-Lewis noted that the Constitution states that a municipality must be assigned a function when there is adequate capacity at the municipal level to perform said function, and when there is an agreement between the national and local governments. The Mayor called this "functional federalism".[4]
A plan for the City of Cape Town metropolitan municipality to directly manage the Cape Town Metrorail network was formally submitted to the City Council in December 2024.[3]
A Rail Business Plan for devolving Cape Town's Metrorail management from PRASA was approved by the City Council in December 2025. Devolution would depend on funding from the National Treasury.[5] If the City was to succeed with its plan, it would become the first metro in South Africa to directly manage its own passenger rail network.[6]
Network
As of March 2025, 104 Metrorail Western Cape stations are operational, out of a total of 121.[7] The system covers about 460 km of track. It operates on a 1,067 mm narrow gauge and uses 3 kV DC overhead electrification. All services either commence or terminate at the main Cape Town station in the centre of the city, which has 24 platforms.
| Line name | Stations |
|---|---|
| Cape Flats Line | 16 |
| Central Line | 33 |
| Malmesbury Line | 24 |
| Northern Line | 48 |
| Southern Line | 28 |
Cape Flats Line
The Cape Flats Line travels east from Cape Town as far as Maitland, then turns south through Athlone, rejoining the Southern Line at Heathfield. The service terminates at Retreat.[7]
Central Line
The Central Line serves areas to the southeast of the city centre. Trains run from Cape Town to Langa on two different routes, one around the southern side and the other around the eastern side of Pinelands. From Langa they travel on one of three lines, going either to Mitchell's Plain, to Khayelitsha, or through Belhar to Bellville.[7]
Northern Line
The Northern Line serves the northern suburbs of Cape Town as well as some outlying towns. Some trains travel from Cape Town station to Bellville along the old main line through Salt River, Maitland, Goodwood and Parow, while others travel along the relief main line via Century City. After Bellville, trains run on one of three routes: through Kraaifontein and Paarl to Wellington; via Kuils River and Stellenbosch to Muldersvlei; or Kuils River and Somerset West to Strand.[7]
Regional Routes
There are also two longer-distance trains stopping at all stations en route daily. One along the main line to Worcester and at 174 km (108 mi) the longest possible route on a commuter train in South Africa. The other is the only diesel-hauled commuter train in the Western Cape to Malmesbury which travels 78 km (48 mi) on the route to Bitterfontein.
Southern Line
The Southern Line travels from central Cape town through the Southern Suburbs to Muizenberg, and then along the edge of False Bay to Simon's Town.[7] Although Simon's Town is the southern terminus, many trains terminate at Fish Hoek because the line south of Fish Hoek is single-track.
Operation

Frequencies can vary vastly from weekday peaks to weekend-off peaks. Services to Simon's Town, Bellville via Century City, Strand, Muldersvlei (via Stellenbosch) and Wellington are less frequent over weekends with a train about every hour on Saturdays and every two hours on a Sunday. In contrast, weekday frequencies on some lines offer three-minute headways.
Every train displays a four-digit train number. The route and destination of a specific train can be determined by just looking at the train number. Up trains travel towards Cape Town and carry even train numbers, down trains travel away from Cape Town and carry odd train numbers. Destinations can be derived from the following table:[8]
| Line | Train no. | Route | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Southern | 01xx | Fish Hoek ↔ Cape Town | Some Saturday trains extend to Simon's Town |
| Southern | 02xx | Simon's Town ↔ Fish Hoek | Simon's Town shuttle |
| Cape Flats | 05xx | Retreat ↔ Cape Town via Pinelands |
|
| Northern | 23xx | Eersterivier ↔ Bellville | Some Saturday trains extend to Cape Town |
| Northern | 25xx | Kraaifontein ↔ Cape Town via Salt River |
|
| Northern | 26xx | Kraaifontein ↔ Cape Town via Monte Vista |
Including one daily train to/from Malmesbury |
| Northern | 27xx | Bellville ↔ Cape Town via Salt River |
|
| Northern | 28xx | Bellville ↔ Cape Town via Monte Vista | |
| Northern | 32xx | Strand ↔ Bellville | |
| Northern | 34xx | Stellenbosch ↔ Eerste River | |
| Northern | 35xx | Wellington ↔ Cape Town | |
| Central | 90xx | Bellville ↔ Mutual via Langa |
|
| Central | 94xx | Nyanga ↔ Maitland via Pinelands |
|
| Central | 95xx | Langa ↔ Cape Town via Pinelands |
|
| Central | 99xx | Nolungile ↔ Cape Town via Mutual |
Infrastructure and rolling stock
In 2013, PRASA signed a R51 billion contract with Alstom to supply 600 X’Trapolis Mega trainsets, with local production included.[9] Older rolling stock (Class 5M2) is being phased out. By March 2025, 72 X’Trapolis Mega sets operate in the Western Cape.[7]
Existing infrastructure (2018)[10]:
- 121 stations (132 including halts)
- 489 km of railway track
- 10400 ha of reserve land
- 70 level crossings
- 320 km of demarcated rail reserve
- 96 bridges
- 19 foot bridges
- 380 culverts
- 9 km of sea walls
Incidents
- 13 November 2006 - A train hit a truck stalled on an unprotected level crossing. The truck was carrying at least 33 farmworkers; nineteen were killed and six were injured.
- 25 August 2010 - A train hit a minibus taxi that had allegedly driven around the boom barriers on a level crossing. The minibus was carrying fourteen schoolchildren, of whom ten were killed.
- 20 October 2015 - Western Cape Metrorail reported this morning that four motor coaches and six carriages were destroyed in a fire in the early hours of Tuesday.
- 15 April 2016 - Trains set alight at Woodstock and Kraaifontein.
- July 2016 - Robbery and murder of train driver at Netreg Station.
- 7 August 2016 - Two Metrorail trains caught alight and burned at the Retreat Station in Cape Town on Sunday afternoon.
- 1 December 2016 - Metrorail has had yet another one of its trains damaged. This time one was set alight at Thornton Station late on Thursday evening.
- 12 June 2017 - Two trains were gutted by fire at Cape Town station.
- 20 November 2017 - Train set alight Century City
- 27 April 2018 - A train hit a bakkie (pick-up truck), killing all 7 people on board. This incident happened in the same place where the 2010 minibus incident occurred, i.e. Blackheath level crossing.[11][12]
- 22 May 2018 - 4 carriages were burnt
- 30 May 2018 - 2 carriages were set alight - one person was killed and three injured.
- 18 June 2018 - 3 train carriages were burnt on the Southern line. The fire began mid-afternoon at Steenberg Station.[13]
- 24 June 2018 - "At about 19:20 on the 24th June 2018 City Fire and Rescue Services responded in Radu Road in Philippi where three railway carriages were alight"
- 21 July 2018 - Seven coaches, as well as two motor coaches and five trailers were destroyed by a fire. "The estimated cost of the damaged coaches is approximately R30m."[14]
- 26 July 2018 - Five carriages, and overhead power cables were damaged at Retreat Station.[15]
- 21 April 2019 - Two trains were set on fire at Cape Town station.[16]
See also
References
- ^ a b "PRASA increases commuter trips to 77 million". The South African Government News Agency. 9 October 2025. Retrieved 18 February 2026.
- ^ Aiden Daries (4 April 2025). "Cape Town train revival on track, says Prasa boss". Cape Town ETC. Retrieved 18 February 2026.
- ^ a b c Steve Kretzmann, GroundUp (2 December 2024). "How Cape Town plans to manage passenger rail". Moneyweb. Retrieved 18 February 2026.
- ^ a b c Carin Smith (28 April 2022). "Cape Town says its bid to take rail management from Prasa just got a big boost". news24. Retrieved 18 February 2026.
- ^ Liezl Human, GroundUp (17 December 2025). "City of Cape Town a step closer to running train services". Moneyweb. Retrieved 18 February 2026.
- ^ Liesl Peyper (10 November 2025). "Cape Town pushes to be SA's first metro in charge of passenger rail". Moneyweb. Retrieved 18 February 2026.
- ^ a b c d e f "PRASA - Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa". www.prasa.com. Archived from the original on 3 October 2025. Retrieved 15 February 2026.
- ^ "PRASA Western Cape". Retrieved 22 March 2025.
- ^ "PRASA and Alstom sign R51bn EMU contract". Railway Gazette International. 14 October 2013. Archived from the original on 24 July 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2017.
- ^ https://www.compcom.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Metrorail-presentation.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ Seven die as train hits bakkie at crossing Times Live, published 27th of April 2018, retrieved 11th of May 2025; Archived version [1] <= here
- ^ Seven people perish in Cape Town train crash SABC (South African Broadcasting Corporation), published 27th of April 2018, retrieved 11th of May 2025; Archived version [2] <= here
- ^ Pitt, Christina (18 June 2018). "Three railway coaches set alight at a Cape Town train station". News24. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
- ^ "R30m damage caused by Cape Town train fire".
- ^ "Another Metrorail train on fire in Cape Town, bringing the number of incidents to five".
- ^ "Two trains on fire at Cape Town train station". SABC News - Breaking news, special reports, world, business, sport coverage of all South African current events. Africa's news leader. 21 April 2019. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
