Linthicum, MD
Amtrak + MARC Penn Line station serving Baltimore-Washington International Airport via a shuttle bus. Public platforms on the Northeast Corridor; both Acela and Northeast Regional call here. The free airport shuttle and the station's pedestrian access make this railfan-friendly without flying.
Stay behind yellow lines — high-speed trains pass through on adjacent tracks at speed even when not stopping. Amtrak Police patrol; photography from the public platform is permitted.
Paid parking lot on-site; usually has capacity outside peak commuter hours. Airport long-term lots are closer to the terminal — not the station.
Mid-morning through mid-afternoon for sunlight on northbound trains; the platform orientation is roughly N-S.
Very high — Amtrak NEC + MARC Penn Line. Acela stops are limited; Northeast Regional + Palmetto + Vermonter + Carolinian all stop. ~60+ trains/day combined.
Restrooms + vending at the station. Airport terminal accessible via the free shuttle. Linthicum has limited services walking-distance.
For the parent, spouse, or friend along for the ride — restrooms, food, and what to do while your railfan watches trains.
Visiting BWI Rail Station is a great way to enjoy some train watching while you take a break nearby.
While your railfan is busy spotting trains, you can relax at a nearby restaurant like Maiwand Kabob for a quick bite. If you're up for a little walk, the airport terminal is accessible via a free shuttle, offering more dining options and shops.
Safety: Make sure to keep your kid at least 25 feet back from any track and stay behind the yellow lines.
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Hotels and rail experiences nearby. Links earn us a small referral — we only surface partners we'd use ourselves.
The starter kit serious railfans wish they'd bought day one. Each link earns us a small Amazon Associates referral — we only list gear we'd actually carry.
Weatherproof pages that take pen ink in rain or sweat. Log road numbers, consist notes, observed times — you'll want them in your logbook later. The No. 311 is the original yellow tagboard model — the most popular field notebook in history; the same one surveyors and biologists carry. ($10-$15)
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Class 2 reflective vest. Not for trespassing — for legitimate trackside viewing on public sidewalks and parking lots near busy lines, so the engineer sees you and you don't get a friendly 'move along' from BNSF police. Looks the part too. ($10-$20)
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Reading a CSX road number off a passing unit at half a mile = magic. 10x42 is the railfan sweet spot — enough power, still light enough to hold steady. Nikon's PROSTAFF 3S is the standard recommendation: under $150 and the optics punch above the price. ($120-$170)
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