Horotiu railway station was a station on the North Island Main Trunk in New Zealand serving Horotiu.
It was a 'flag station', originally north of Te Rapa and south of NgÃÂruawÃÂhia and named Pukete. The station was moved just over a mile to the north in 1880, to be 76 mi (122 km) from Auckland. It seems no explanation was given for the controversial move. The station changed its name from Pukete to Horotiu on 23 June 1907.
Traffic remained light, amounting to ã49 in 1901. It was converted to a switch-out station in 1909, equipped with distant signals in 1916, when the AFFCO sidings opened, and had other alterations to signalling and interlocking in 1934, with extension of automatic signalling from Mercer to Frankton. In 1930 Frankton to Horotiu () was double tracked, with automatic signalling also extended to Mercer. Horotiu's power interlocking was the first automatic operation of main line points in the country, replacing home and distant signals, Wood's locks (a single key for signal and facing points, named after S P Woods of McKenzie and Holland) and the tablet station. The north to NgÃÂruawÃÂhia was double track from 5 December 1937.
In 1916 a goods trains collided with wagons.