Chathill is a railway station on the East Coast Main Line, which runs between London King's Cross and Edinburgh Waverley.
The station, situated 46 miles 1 chain (46.0 mi; 74.0 km) north of Newcastle, serves the hamlet of Chathill, and surrounding coastal villages of Beadnell and Seahouses in Northumberland, England.
[2] Between 1 August 1898 and 27 October 1951, the station served as the south-western terminus of the North Sunderland Railway, which ran between Chathill and the fishing village of Seahouses.
[4] Owing to the limited service (two trains per day towards Morpeth and Newcastle), an easement permits passengers travelling north towards Berwick-upon-Tweed and Scotland to double back via Alnmouth for Alnwick.
The station has retained its 1847 Grade II listed building, designed by Newcastle architect Benjamin Green, and the signal box dating from around 1873 (extended at the north end about 1911) on the northbound platform, though neither is in operational use.