Tundla (Ṭūṇḍlā) is a town and a municipal board in Firozabad district in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.
Tundla is well connected to other major cities of the country via regular trains.
That changed in 1862, when the East Indian Railway's main line was extended from Shikohabad to Tundla.
This, along with the connecting branch line from Tundla to Agra, officially opened on 1 April 1862.
By the turn of the century, its bazar was one of the main commercial centres in what was then Agra district, and it was a point of export through the railway.
High walled British constructions, huge barracks, a Catholic church built in 1860, an old Jain temple, Kothis (bungalows) of officers surrounded by sprawling lawns adorn Tundla as the main center of British administration.
Tundla is a technical halt for changing drivers and guards for almost all of the trains on the New Delhi–Pandit Deen Dayal Junction / Lucknow sections.
Tundla Junction is important for the people of Agra and for tourists providing connections to the east of the country, i.e. Kolkata, Guwahati, Patna etc., and especially to the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.
It has connections to Agra Cantonment, Etawah, Aligarh Junction, Phaphund,tundla, Kanpur Central railway station etc.
[citation needed] Tundla is a statutory town with a Nagar Palika Parishad (municipal council) and it also serves as a tehsil headquarters.