is an interchange passenger railway station located in the city of Fujisawa, Kanagawa, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East) and the private railway operators Odakyu Electric Railway and Enoshima Electric Railway. Clustered around the station are large department stores and office buildings, forming the center of the city.
This station is served by the JR East Tà Âkaidà  Main Line with, with some through services via the Shà Ânan-Shinjuku Line, the Odakyu Enoshima Line, and the Enoshima Electric Railway. The station lies from the official starting point of the Tà Âkaidà  Main Line at Tokyo Station.
JR East uses two island platforms connected by a footbridge to the main station building. Platforms 1 and 2 are used by Shà Ânan services. The station has a Midori no Madoguchi staffed ticket office.
The Odakyu line uses a double bay platform. Trains arrive and depart from the west end of the platform and go through crossover points to the northbound and southbound tracks.
The Enoden station uses a single bay platform. Its automated turnstiles are compatible with Suica and Pasmo systems.
What is now the JR East station opened on 11 July 1887. The adjacent Enoshima Electric Railway station opened on 1 September 1902, and the Odakyu station opened on 1 April 1929. With the dissolution and privatization of JNR on 1 April 1987, the station came under the operational control of JR East.
Station numbering was introduced to the Odakyu-owned stations January 2014 with Fujisawa being assigned station numbers OH13 for the Enoshima line and EN01 for the Enoshima Electric Railway.
In fiscal 2019, the JR East portion of the station was used by an average of 108,873 passengers daily (boarding passengers only). During the same period, the Odakyu portion of the station was used by an average of 165,663 passengers daily, and the Enoden portion of the station was used by 22,968 passengers daily.
The passenger figures for previous years are as shown below.