List of Lyon Metro stations
The following is a list of Lyon Metro stations., there are 42 stations in the Lyon Metro system proper. This list includes the metro stations, as well as the stations of the two funiculars of Lyon.
Metro
All metro stations are wheelchair accessible, and are equipped with turnstiles or automated gates.Line A
Line A of the Lyon Metro currently serves 14 stations, and has a route length of. It, together with Line B, were the inaugural lines of the Lyon Metro, opening in 1978. An extension of Line A from Laurent Bonnevay–Astroballe to Vaulx-en-Velin–La Soie opened in 2007.- Perrache
- Ampère–Victor Hugo
- Bellecour
- Cordeliers
- Hôtel de Ville–Louis Pradel
- Foch
- Masséna
- Charpennes–Charles Hernu
- République–Villeurbanne
- Gratte-Ciel
- Flachet–Alain Gilles
- Cusset
- Laurent Bonnevay–Astroballe
- Vaulx-en-Velin–La Soie
Line B
Line B of the Lyon Metro currently serves 12 stations, and has a route length of. It, together with Line A, were the inaugural lines of the Lyon Metro, opening in 1978. It has since been extended southwards twice: from Part-Dieu to Jean Macé in 1981, and again from Jean Macé to Stade de Gerland in 2000; a further extension to the train station at Oullins Gare opened in December 2013.Then a new extension opened in October 2023 featuring 2 new station:Oullins Centre and Saint-Genis-Laval Hôpital Lyon Sud.- Charpennes–Charles Hernu
- Brotteaux
- Gare Part-Dieu–Vivier Merle
- Place Guichard–Bourse du Travail
- Saxe–Gambetta
- Jean Macé
- Place Jean Jaurès
- Debourg
- Stade de Gerland–Le LOU
- Gare d'Oullins
- Oullins Centre
- Saint-Genis-Laval–Hôpital Lyon Sud
Line C
Line C of the Lyon Metro serves 5 stations, and has a route length of. It began to operate in 1974, independently of the Lyon Metro, as a rack railway, after the conversion from a former funicular. When it was integrated into the Lyon Metro with the latter's inauguration in 1978, Line C was extended from Croix-Paquet to Hôtel de Ville; in 1984 the line reached its current northern terminus at Cuire.- Hôtel de Ville–Louis Pradel
- Croix-Paquet
- Croix-Rousse
- Hénon
- Cuire
Line D
Line D of the Lyon Metro is the longest line, serving 15 stations, and having a route length of. It is the newest line of the Lyon Metro, first opening in 1991. Line D has been extended twice since its opening: in 1992 from Grange Blanche to Gare de Vénissieux, and in 1997 from Gorge de Loup to Gare de Vaise.- Gare de Vaise
- Valmy
- Gorge de Loup
- Vieux Lyon–Cathédrale Saint-Jean
- Bellecour
- Guillotière–Gabriel Péri
- Saxe–Gambetta
- Garibaldi
- Sans Souci
- Monplaisir–Lumière
- Grange Blanche
- Laënnec
- Mermoz–Pinel
- Parilly
- Gare de Vénissieux
Funiculars
Funicular F1 (Saint-Just)
- Vieux Lyon–Cathédrale Saint-Jean
- Minimes–Théâtres Romains
- Saint-Just
Funicular F2 (Fourvière)
- Vieux Lyon–Cathédrale Saint-Jean
- Fourvière