
Savidor Central
Tel Aviv main railway station, damaged by Iranian missile strike forcing rail suspension.
Last refreshed: 30 March 2026
Can Tel Aviv's rail network withstand a sustained Iranian missile campaign targeting civilian infrastructure?
Timeline for Savidor Central
Struck in IRGC's 61st wave using Khorramshahr-4 and Qadr missiles
Iran Conflict 2026: Two dead in Ramat Gan; 61st IRGC waveWhat is Savidor Central station?
Was Savidor Central train station damaged in the Iran missile attack?
Did Iran shut down Tel Aviv trains?
Background
Tel Aviv HaShalom, commonly called Savidor Central, is Israel's busiest railway station, situated in central Tel Aviv at the northern edge of the Ayalon corridor. Operated by Israel Railways, it serves as the principal interchange hub connecting the country's main intercity and suburban lines, handling hundreds of thousands of passengers weekly.
Savidor Central suffered damage during the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)'s 61st wave of Operation True Promise 4, when Khorramshahr-4 and Qadr missiles struck the Tel Aviv area, forcing suspension of all rail services. The attack killed two people in nearby Ramat Gan and wounded four others .
The station's disruption during an Iranian missile barrage illustrates how precision strikes on civilian infrastructure carry strategic weight beyond body counts. Forcing a halt to rail services across Israel's primary urban corridor signals an escalation in targeting logic that moves well beyond air bases and military sites.