18th February, 2026
Seven new railway stations to be built in Wales under new plans
TfW train at Wrexham General
New plans are being announced today (18th February) that will see plans for the construction of seven new railway stations in Wales announced.
The UK Government and the Welsh Government will work together to bring a more frequent service across the country.
Half a billion pounds is promised in this Spending Review and will see new stations built at Magor and Undy, Llanwern, Cardiff East, Newport West, Somerton, Cardiff Parkway and Deeside Industrial Park.
The UK Government says that this is part of a broader plan to get Britain building again, and should help support the creation of tens of thousands of jobs.
Work will start on the new stations later this year, with Magor and Undy expected to be the first of these stations to be opened.
The station at Deeside Industrial Park will help boost the Wrexham – Liverpool line for better connections to the rest of the UK.
For too long, Wales has been let down by a UK government unwilling to do the hard yards and build the future they deserve.
This government is turning the page on historic dither and delay with seven new stations, thousands of jobs, and a generational commitment to build a rail network fit for Wales’ future.
This isn’t tinkering nor sticking plasters. This is investment for the long term – and change communities will feel. This is putting Wales on the front foot and getting Britain building again.”
Prime Minister, Keir Starmer
We are now in an unprecedented position to deliver the next chapter of transformation for rail services in Wales. We have secured long-term commitments to key projects and a renewed ambition for our rail network.
Changes of this scale don’t happen overnight but they do happen when there is vision, determination, and cooperation. We’ve already proved that with the Core Valley Lines, and we are beginning to see the same momentum with Network North Wales. When you have the ambition, the commitment and the will, real progress follows – and we have all three.
First Minister, Eluned Morgan