Lebanon station is a historic train station in Lebanon, Pennsylvania. Designed by the Wilson Brothers & Company in the Shingle Style and built by the Reading Company in 1900, it consists of two sections connected by a large overhanging roof. It is located one block north of the Pennsylvania Railroad's Lebanon station.
The smaller section is a 1 1/2-story, rectangular structure that contained a baggage room, telegraph office, and yardmasters' office. It measures . It has a hipped gable roof with bellcast hipped gable dormers and a two-story octagonal tower.
The larger section is a two-story structure measuring approximately and contained men's and women's waiting areas and restrooms. It features a large octagonal tower rising above the station and has a hipped gable roof with hipped gable dormers and a semicircular bay.
In addition to the Reading, the Cornwall Railroad operated passenger trains at the station until the company discontinued passenger service on January 29, 1929. Passenger service on the Reading ended on April 28, 1963.
The station listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Reading Railroad Station in 1975.