First China-made train for the cross-border rail system to be tested in Singapore, ahead of preparation for passenger service
[SINGAPORE] The first train for the Johor Bahru-Singapore Rapid Transit System (RTS) Link was unveiled on Monday (Jun 30), with the cross-border rail system currently estimated to be about 56 per cent complete.
The 4-kilometre light rail system will move passengers between Woodlands North Station in Singapore and Bukit Chagar Station in JB. It is expected to begin passenger service by December 2026.
It will have eight trains manufactured by China Railway Rolling Stock Corporation Zhuzhou Locomotive.
The first train, delivered to Singapore in April, was unveiled in a joint ceremony between Singapore and Malaysia’s transport ministries at the Singapore Rail Test Centre in Tuas.
Rail link operator RTS Operations (RTSO) will carry out offsite systems integration testing on the first train at SRTC over the next few months. This includes integrating the train with the signalling system, platform screen doors and onboard communications system.
RTSO is a joint venture between Singapore transport operator SMRT and Malaysian public transport firm Prasarana.
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Final assembly of the other seven trains in Malaysia began in the fourth quarter of 2024 and is expected to be complete in Q4 2025.
From Q4 2025 to Q3 2026, testing of the main rail line between Woodlands and Bukit Chagar will take place. Trial operations will begin in Q4 2026, before passenger service starts.
Each RTS Link train is automated, with no driver aboard, and can carry a maximum of 1,087 people across four cars.
The line’s peak capacity is 10,000 passengers per hour, per direction. The journey between the two stations will take around 5 minutes, with trains running from 6am to 12 midnight daily.
Passengers will clear both countries’ customs and immigration control at the station of origin, leaving them free to depart when they arrive across the border.
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