Kolari railway station

Kolari railway station is located in the municipality of Kolari in the Lapland region of Finland, situated almost 3 km northeast of Kolari center, in Ylläsjokisuu. It is the northernmost railway station in Finland, located 800 km north of Helsinki Central railway station. The railway track extends 18 km further north to the Rautuvaara railway yard but this section is disused - the Rautuvaara iron ore mine closed in 1989.

Kolari station is the terminus of the track from Tornio to Kolari, and serves both passenger and cargo traffic. Passenger traffic is at its highest during the skiing season and, as well as Kolari, the station also serves Levi (85 km away), Ylläs (85 km away), Äkäslompolo (40 km away), Pallas (100 km away) and Muonio (80 km away), all of which can be reached by bus from the station, and additionally, the Swedish village of Pajala (30 km away). For part of the year, the station is also served by car transporter trains from Helsinki, Turku and Tampere.

The first passenger train to Kolari arrived at the station in 1985. Currently the station serves almost 80 thousand passengers per year.

A new station building designed by Ilpo Väisänen was constructed at Kolari in 1998, in the style of a goahti. Most trains (both freight and passenger) at Kolari are hauled by VR Class Dr16 diesel locomotives, with smaller Dv12 locomotives also seeing use.

Ticket sales at the station were discontinued on 2 August 2014, but there is a ticket vending machine at the station.