Phone |
Amtrak Reservations |
Dial 800-USA-RAIL (800-872-7245). Talk to Julie, Amtrak's automated agent, or
a real agent. They can find your train or make a reservation
for you. |
Web |
Amtrak.com |
Click on the status tab and fill in the blanks to get the status for you train.
The status only stays on-line for about five days.
Track A Train will allow you to pinpoint on a map where a train is, in near real time.
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Amtrak Status Maps |
Regional maps show all of the trains in that region and their status, at a glance.
Click on a train to show details of a train's performance. Archives go back several years.
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Amtrak Location Map |
Better version of Amtrak's Track-A-Train. This one's easy to get to, too. |
Text/Email |
Amtrak.com |
When you make a reservation, you will be offered the option to be notified by
email/text if your train is a minimum of 30 minutes late.
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Amtrak Alerts
Amtrak NEC Alerts |
Amtrak Twitter feeds which give delay information for off-NEC and NEC trains, respectively.
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ASM Alerts |
This is an application that will allow you to receive text/email alerts of any train's progress.
By customizing your Alert, you can choose to get all of a train's times, just its late times, or
whether or not it sustains a Service Disruption or recovers from one. You can also
choose to get the train times for a particular station, only.
You can apply this to a single train, to a list of trains that you provide, or a whole class of them (designated usually by their timetable names).
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Station Status Boards |
Amtrak Station Status Boards |
A simulated Solari-type board is provided to furnish the status of Amtrak trains at any station that you choose - as if you were there - right now.
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Archives |
Amtrak Train Status Archives |
Look up the record of any train.
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Amtrak Status Maps Archive Database |
The Amtrak Train Status Archives, but in a database, so it's searchable. It makes it easy to ask for and receive exactly what you want. Performance graphs are available as well as timetable resources.
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