Kazakhstan's railway network connects major cities with intercity, express, and regional services.
2 routes · click any for schedule and fares
5 of 5 services listed · all classes and types
Express Almaty-Semey
Express#KZ501
Express Nur-Sultan-Aktobe
Express#KZ301
IC Almaty-Shymkent
Intercity#KZ201
Night Nur-Sultan-Almaty
Special#N701
Talgo Nur-Sultan–Almaty
HSR#KZ701
6 stations with departure boards
Live data, timetables, fares and station maps — all in one place, free.
TrainTrackings shows schedules and live data. Purchase tickets directly through the official Kazakhstan Railways website.
Answers to the most common questions about Kazakhstan trains.
TrainTrackings lists 5 train services for Kazakhstan, covering intercity, express, regional and special trains sourced from official operators.
We list 6 railway stations for Kazakhstan with timetable data, GPS coordinates, and station codes.
TrainTrackings covers 2 train routes in Kazakhstan, each with detailed stop listings, distance, and journey time data.
Book Kazakhstan train tickets at # (Kazakhstan Railways). TrainTrackings provides scheduling data; use official booking sites to purchase tickets.
Yes. TrainTrackings provides live schedule tracking for Kazakhstan trains, syncing with official APIs to show real-time status.
Kazakhstan's railways use Standard gauge track, covering approximately National network of routes.
The fastest trains in Kazakhstan reach speeds of up to Varies, operated by Kazakhstan Railways.
The railway system in Kazakhstan has evolved over more than a century and a half into one of the defining features of the national transport infrastructure. The earliest lines were built during the colonial and industrial expansion era, connecting major ports and administrative centres to facilitate the movement of goods and officials across difficult terrain. These first routes established the foundational corridor that much of the modern network still follows today.
The expansion of the network through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries brought the railway to smaller towns and rural areas, fundamentally transforming the economy and social fabric of Kazakhstan. Agricultural products could be transported to market faster, mail delivery was accelerated, and for the first time long-distance travel became accessible to ordinary citizens rather than only the wealthy.
Following independence and modernisation programmes through the mid-to-late twentieth century, Kazakhstan's railways were nationalised and restructured under a single state operator in most cases, enabling coordinated investment in electrification, rolling stock renewal, and track upgrades. Today the network is a mix of legacy infrastructure on older routes and modern high-speed or electrified corridors on the busiest intercity links.