| Country/territory
|
Railway
|
| Argentina
|
11,080 km (6,880 mi)
|
| Austria
|
- Innsbruck Tramway (operating)
- Gmunden Tramway (operating)
- Stubaitalbahn (operating)
- Achenseebahn (operating)
- Schlossbergbahn (Graz) (operating)
|
| Bangladesh
|
1,830 km (1,140 mi), out of which 365 km (227 mi) are dual gauge with 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) gauge
|
| Belgium
|
- National Company of Light Railways — ceased operations, except:
- Belgian Coast Tram (operating)
- Charleroi Light Metro (operating)
- Several "museum lines" kept in operation for tourists by volunteers: tramway to the Caves of Han-sur-Lesse, Tramway touristique de l'Aisne, etc.
- Antwerp Tram (operating)
- Ghent Tram (operating)
|
| Benin
|
578 km (359 mi)
|
| Bolivia
|
3,600 km (2,200 mi)
|
| Brazil
|
23,489 km (14,595 mi)
- Mostly in cargo railways, including E.F Vitoria-Minas Passenger/Cargo Line and R.R. (operating)
- Fortaleza Metro (operating)
- Teresina Metro (operating)
|
| Bulgaria
|
154 km (96 mi) of 1,009 mm (3 ft 3+23⁄32 in) gauge
|
| Burkina Faso
|
- Abidjan-Ouagadougou railway (operating)
|
| Burma
|
3,200 kilometres (2,000 mi) 160 kilometres (99 mi)
- Burmese railways, except for the Burma Mines Railway.
|
| Cambodia
|
612 km (380 mi)
|
| Cameroon
|
1,104 km (686 mi)
|
| Chile
|
2,923 km (1,816 mi)
|
| China
|
- Kunhe Railway (formerly the Yunnan–Vietnam Railway) (operating).
- Dujiangyan–Siguniangshan mountain railway [zh] (in construction).
- Former Datong–Puzhou railway and Zhengding-Taiyuan Railway. All regauged to standard gauge.
|
| Croatia
|
|
| Czech Republic
|
Like other Sudeten cities, the trams of Liberec used metre gauge in the past. All lines however have been rebuilt to standard gauge.
|
| Democratic Republic of the Congo
|
Several metre gauge railways
|
| Denmark
|
See Metre gauge railways in Denmark and Narrow-gauge railways in Denmark. A few local railways. Only one remains, but regauged to standard gauge.
- Århus tramway (closed), Danish Tramway Museum.
|
| Egypt
|
- Cairo tram (ceased operations)
|
| Finland
|
|
| France
|
Historically used in many local and regional railways, only a few of which remain today.
|
| Germany
|
|
| Greece
|
The Piraeus, Athens and Peloponnese Railways used to be the largest metre-gauge network in Europe but are now largely abandoned. Only the suburban rail service of Patras, and the Olympia–Katakolo tourist railway still use the network. An undergoing project of Messinian Suburban Railway will bring back at least 40 kilometers of the unused metre gauge railway
|
| Hungary
|
- Szombathely tram (1897-1974)
- Sopron tram (1900-1923)
- Borsodnádasd record factory (defunct)
|
| India
|
Nilgiri Mountain Railway (operating)
Mailani - Nanpara Railway (operating)
|
| Iraq
|
Mesopotamian Railways
|
| Israel
|
Sections of 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+3⁄8 in) railways, later converted to 1,050 mm (3 ft 5+11⁄32 in) or 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) gauge
|
| Italy
|
|
| Ivory Coast
|
- Abidjan-Ouagadougou railway (operating)
|
| Kenya
|
|
| Laos
|
A 3.5 km extension of the metre-gauge State Railway of Thailand network across the border into Laos
|
| Latvia
|
Liepāja tramway (operating)
|
| Madagascar
|
875 km (544 mi). There are two unconnected systems operated by Madarail
|
| Malaysia
|
|
| Mali
|
641 km (398 mi)
Dakar–Niger Railway
|
| Malta
|
Malta Railway
|
| Morocco
|
Several industrial railways in former Spanish Morocco
|
| New Zealand
|
Wellington Cable Car (operating)
|
| Norway
|
- Trondheim Tramway (operating)
- Fløibanen (operating)
- Thamshavn Line (operating as a museum railway)
|
| Pakistan
|
- Mirpur Khas–Nawabshah Railway (defunct)
- One section of Hyderabad–Khokhrapar Branch Line (converted to broad gauge)
|
| Poland
|
- Trams in Bydgoszcz (operating)
- Trams in Toruń (operating)
- there are plans to interconnect both cities' systems
- Trams in Elbląg (operating)
- Tramways in Grudziądz (operating)
- Trams in Łódź (including suburban lines) (operating)
- Trams in Olsztyn (defunct 1965, newly-built system in 2015 is standard gauge)
- Gryficka Kolej Wąskotorowa (operating as a tourist railway)
- Koszalińska Kolej Wąskotorowa (operating as a tourist railway)
- Piaseczyńska Kolej Wąskotorowa (operating as a tourist railway)
|
| Portugal
|
Several mainly mountainous branch lines, mostly abandoned in the 1990s, never fully interconnected — connected to the REFER network by means of shared stations and some dual-gauge stretches. Metro de Mirandela and Vouga line remain in use. Other metric networks include Funchal rack railway (defunct in 1943), Coimbra trams (defunct in 1980), and Sintra trams.
|
| Puerto Rico
|
Full network of Puerto Rican 1000mm railways in 1920: 654 km (406 mi)[2]
- American Railroad Company – 417 km (259 mi), (1891-c.1957) (defunct). After 1957, some tracks of American Railroad Company were acquired by Land Authority of Puerto Rico for sugar cane hauling: the Arecibo network (Central Cambalache: 1957-1981) (defunct) and the Aguada-Mayagüez line (Central Coloso: 1957-c.1970) (defunct)
- Fajardo Development Company – 59.9 km (37.2 mi) for sugar cane hauling between Carolina to Naguabo in eastern Puerto Rico (1902-1977) (defunct)[3]
- Ferrocarril Histórico de Puerto Rico, Fajardo – 7.4 km (4.6 mi) tracks of Central Fajardo Railroad from Fajardo outskirts to El Yunque foothills used as right-of-way for this heritage railroad since 1971. Destroyed by Fajardo River flooding in 1974 (defunct)[4]
- Ponce and Guayama Railroad – 97 km (60 mi) for sugar cane hauling between Ponce to Arroyo in southern Puerto Rico (1904-1990) (defunct)
- Train of the South – 6.4 km (4.0 mi) tracks of Ponce and Guayama Railroad from Guayama to Arroyo used as right-of-way for this heritage railroad between 1984-1988 and reused between 1996-2005 (defunct)
- Caguas Tramway (Río Piedras-Caguas Railway) – 28 km (17 mi) (1908-1928) (defunct)
- Mayagüez Tramway (1915-1927) (defunct)
- Ponce Tramway (1902-1927) (defunct)
|
| Romania
|
|
| Russia
|
|
| Senegal
|
Dakar–Niger Railway – 1,287 km (800 mi)
|
| Serbia
|
Belgrade Tram (operating)
|
| Singapore
|
Singapore span of the Keretapi Tanah Melayu (Malayan Railway) for shuttle service.
|
| Slovakia
|
|
| Spain
|
- Euskotren Trena inter-city, commuter & metro lines and Euskotren Tranbia (Bilbao and Vitoria-Gasteiz) tram lines
- Renfe lines in north-west Spain, including the Transcantábrico (operating)
- FGC Llobregat–Anoia Line and Barcelona Metro line 8
- Bilbao Metro (operating)
- Cercanías Madrid C-9 (Cercedilla–Cotos) (operating)
- Cercanías Murcia/Alicante C-4 (Cartagena–Los Nietos) (operating)
- Palma de Mallorca Metro (operating)
- Valencia Metro (operating)
- Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat Valenciana (operating)
|
| Sweden
|
Skansens bergbana (operating)
|
| Switzerland
|
- Albula Railway and Bernina railway (crosses into Italy). These railways share UNESCO World Heritage Site status as part of the Rhaetian Railway (operating)
- Appenzell–St. Gallen–Trogen railway, Altstätten–Gais railway line, Gossau–Wasserauen railway line, runs in the cantons of St. Gallen, Appenzell Innerrhoden and Appenzell Ausserrhoden (operating)
- Dolderbahn, Funicular railway in Zurich converted into a rack railway and extended in the early 1970s. (operating)
- Forchbahn, runs as a tram in Zürich city and as a train outside the city (operating)
- Zentralbahn, merged with Luzern Stans Engelbergbahn, Brünigbahn and Meiringen Innertkirchen Bahn (operating)
- Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn, (operating)
- Chemins de fer du Jura, (operating)
- La Chaux-de-Fonds–Glovelier line, (operating)
- La Chaux-de-Fonds–Les Ponts-de-Martel railway, (operating)
- Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway, (operating)
- Le Locle–Les Brenets line, (operating)
- Trams in Neuchâtel, (operating)
- Centovalli railway, (operating)
- Lugano–Ponte Tresa Railway, (operating)
- Martigny–Châtelard Railway, (operating)
- Chemin de fer Nyon-St-Cergue-Morez, (operating)
- Chemin de fer Bière-Apples-Morges, (operating)
- Chemin de fer Yverdon–Ste-Croix, (operating)
- Chemin de fer Lausanne–Echallens–Bercher, (operating)
- Montreux–Lenk im Simmental line, (operating)
- Transports Publics du Chablais, (operating)
- Frauenfeld-Wil-Bahn, (operating)
- Regionalverkehr Bern-Solothurn, (operating)
- Biel–Täuffelen–Ins railway, (operating)
- Trams in Basel, (operating)
- Baselland Transport, (operating)
- Trams in Bern, (operating)
- Trams in Geneva, (operating)
- Berner Oberlandbahn, (operating)
- Montreux–Lenk im Simmental line, (operating)
- Gornergratbahn, (operating)
- Trams in Zürich, trams in Zürich city and Glattal (operating)
- Bienne–Evilard Funicular
|
| Tanzania
|
Tanzania Railways Corporation – about 2,600 km (1,600 mi) (break of gauge with 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) TAZARA Railway)
|
| Thailand
|
State Railway of Thailand, 4,346 km (2,700 mi).
|
| Togo
|
568 km (353 mi).
|
| Tunisia
|
1,674 km (1,040 mi) used along with standard gauge (471 km (293 mi))
|
| Turkey
|
|
| Uganda
|
- Uganda Railway run by Uganda Railways Corporation. Metre gauge link from Malaba to Kampala city centre (operating, under rehabilitation)
- Metre gauge link from Malaba to Tororo (operating)
- Metre gauge link from Tororo - Gulu - Pakwach to Tororo (under rehabilitation)
|
| Ukraine
|
- Lviv tram (operating)
- Vinnytsia Tramway (operating)
- Zhytomyr tram (operating)
|
| United Kingdom
|
- Waltham Iron Ore Tramway
- Wellingborough Tramway
- Davington Light Railway
- Cliff Quarry Mineral Railway. Apparently the first metre-gauge railway in the world. Now occupied by the standard gauge Crich Tramway.
- Butts Tramway, Butts Extension Tramway, Lindal Moor Tramway, Eure Pits Tramway (coherent group of lines serving iron ore mines near Dalton-in-Furness, Cumbria, built 1849–1862)
|
| United States
|
- Sierra Lumber Company Railroad. A meter-gauge railway built in 1881 from Lyonsville, California into the redwood forests. It used three steam locomotives and worked until 1907.[5]
- Honda Express at Six Flags Magic Mountain
- Red Car Trolley (located in Disney California Adventure) (defunct - park still operating)
|
| Vietnam
|
Vietnam Railways and KunHe Railway
|