Initially, Engers station played only a minor transport role and only had a couple of railway employees.
In 1912, Engers station, which was then part of the Prussian state railways, sold approximately 150,000 tickets.
The track work as well as the hump and the loading facilities still exist for the most part, but are no longer connected to the railway.
In the Second World War, Engers station and the related workshops, together with large parts of the Rhine line, were badly damaged by Allied artillery bombardments in March 1945.
The station is also served by three bus routes of the Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Mosel (Rhine-Moselle transport association, VRM).