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Florida Fall Foliage Train Rides

Published: September 4, 2025

By: Adam Burns

Fall foliage and Florida don’t usually show up in the same sentence. The Sunshine State is evergreen for most of the year, and its subtropical climate means you won’t find mountainsides blazing with scarlet maples.

Yet autumn here has its own quiet magic. Bald cypress domes bronze and rust, swamp maples and blackgums flash pockets of crimson, muhly grass paints roadside swales cotton-candy pink, and marsh grasses turn honey-gold.

Experiencing those subtler seasonal shifts by rail adds nostalgia, ease, and a sense of occasion—especially when paired with pumpkin patches, vintage locomotives, and small-town depots.

If you’re planning content or a getaway around fall train rides in Florida, here’s what to know, where to ride, and how to set the right expectations so your audience (or family) has a fantastic time.

While there are no dedicated fall foliage excursions currently operating in Florida, a number of locations host train rides during this time of year.

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When and where Florida shows fall color

Timing: North and Central Florida start showing color in late October, with the best weeks typically mid-November through early December. In South Florida, cypress color often arrives later—late November into December and sometimes lingering into January.

What turns: Bald cypress and pond cypress go coppery-bronze, often ringing lakes, rivers, and sloughs. Red maple, blackgum, and sweetgum provide small bursts of red and burgundy in wetter hammocks. Muhly grass (a native ornamental) blooms bright pink in October–November along trails and rights-of-way. In coastal marshes, cordgrass and needlerush shift to warm golds and tans.

Where to look from a train: River crossings and floodplains, pine flatwoods with cypress sloughs, and open ranch country edged by hammocks—more common in North and Central Florida, but visible in pockets further south.

Top Fall Train Experiences

Sugar Express

If you want one rail experience that feels like a true seasonal outing, this is it. Operated by U.S. Sugar, the Sugar Express runs heritage excursions—often steam-powered by beautifully restored locomotive, 4-6-2 #148—over the company’s private rail network around the Lake Okeechobee area.

In fall, select trips spotlight harvest season and small-town depots across Glades, Hendry, and Palm Beach counties. While you won’t be barreling through fiery hardwood forests, you will glide past cane fields ready for harvest, sawgrass wetlands gleaming gold in late light, and cypress strands starting to bronze. Steam, whistles, and palm-lined horizons make for striking photos.

Notably, this year they will host their "Sugar Express Spritzer" excursions for a 2-hour excursion during which time guests 21 or over can enjoy alcoholic beverages and a charcuterie selection.

Florida Railroad Museum

Just south of Tampa–St. Petersburg, the Florida Railroad Museum operates weekend excursions on a former Seaboard Air Line route. Standard rides run roughly an hour to 90 minutes round-trip through quiet ranchlands and pine flatwoods, but October brings one of Florida’s most beloved family rail events: the Pumpkin Patch Express.

You ride out to a pumpkin patch for kids’ activities and photos, then ride back with your chosen gourd. The landscape here shows off fall in Florida’s palette—muhly grass in pink bloom, broom sedge going golden, live oaks draped in Spanish moss, and the occasional cypress slough hinting bronze.

Tips: These events often sell out. Book early, arrive at least 30 minutes prior to departure, and dress for sun and wind if you choose open-window cars. Strollers and snacks policies vary by event; check the museum’s site.

Kirby Family Farm

Kirby Family Farm operates a historic, full-size railroad around its property and hosts seasonal festivals. During October they host the "Scary Train" along the grounds.

The ride is short, but the atmosphere is long on nostalgic Halloween charm—vintage rail equipment, hay bales, and photo ops galore. The surrounding countryside north of Ocala shows some of the state’s better inland color later in the season, especially around nearby rivers and springs.

Tips: Combine a Saturday at Kirby with a Sunday drive through Ocala National Forest’s backroads or a walk at a spring run; cypress along spring outflows often turns by late November.

Seminole Gulf Railway

This isn’t strictly a foliage run—rides depart in the evening and focus on a five-course dinner with a live mystery performance—but fall brings especially fun, spooky-themed shows. The route rolls through the Caloosahatchee River region and Southwest Florida prairies.

You’ll catch glimpses of wetlands at dusk, but the real draw is the classic, dressed-up rail experience.

Tips: Expect a three-and-a-half-hour evening, assigned seating, and a rotating show calendar. Book well ahead for October. It’s a great “date night by rail” while you’re in town for beaches and birding.

DIY Glimpses By Regular Rail

Florida’s everyday passenger trains aren’t marketed as fall foliage tours, but if you time it right, you can stitch together mellow, seasonal views with easy logistics.

SunRail

Weekdays only, but the stretch north of Sanford crossing Lake Monroe and the St. Johns River gives lovely views of cypress stands. Aim for a late-afternoon northbound for warm light on bronzing trees. Check the current schedule; service varies and most weekends are dark unless there’s a special event.

Amtrak "Silver Service"

In November–December, river crossings near Palatka and DeLand often show off cypress and red maples. Pair a ride with a stop at Palatka’s historic station and nearby railroad museum.

A near-Florida bonus

If your audience is based in Northeast Florida, consider flagging one worthy cross-border option: St. Marys Railroad/Georgia Coastal Railway just over the state line in Southeast Georgia. Their fall and holiday-themed trains run through pine country with pockets of hardwood color. It’s an easy day trip from Jacksonville and scratches the “classic autumn excursion” itch better than most of Florida can.

Planning tips to set the right expectations

Book early: Pumpkin Patch, Harvest, and Halloween-themed trains sell out weeks in advance. As soon as dates post, share and reserve.

Aim late: Florida’s fall is late compared to the rest of the country. For actual color on cypress and swamp maples, mid-November through early December is your safest bet, especially north of Orlando. In South Florida, think late November into December.

Manage “leaf-peeping” promises: Be honest that Florida’s color is subtle. Emphasize atmosphere—steam and vintage coaches, pumpkin patches, small towns, marsh sunsets, and wildlife (sandhill cranes, herons, and egrets are common in fall).

Photograph smart: Polarizers help with water glare. Bring a lens cloth for open-window cars. Golden hour is short; if you’re after warm tones on marsh grasses and cypress, book afternoon departures.

Pair with nearby nature: Elevate the day with a walk on a boardwalk or riverside trail. Great add-ons include Circle B Bar Reserve (Lakeland), Myakka River State Park (Sarasota area), Hillsborough River State Park (north of Tampa), Paynes Prairie (Micanopy), and Silver Springs (Ocala). All show off Florida’s autumn palette in their own way and are easy add-ons to Parrish, Williston, or Orlando-area rides.

The bottom line

Florida’s fall foliage won’t ever compete with New England’s, and that’s okay. Here, autumn is about steam whistles echoing across cane fields, kids tumbling off a coach to pick pumpkins, a bronze halo of cypress around a blackwater river, and the pleasure of watching the landscape roll by while someone else does the driving. Choose one of the seasonal excursions above, time your trip for late fall, and lean into Florida’s own version of the season—you’ll deliver an experience that feels both distinctly local and decidedly special.

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