History
Iyo-Shirataki Station began operating on 14 February 1918 as Kaya Station (加屋駅), an intermediate stop on the privately run 762-mm-gauge Ehime Railway between Ōzu and Nagahama-machi. The station was relocated to its present site, about 300 m east of the original position, on 16 July 1928. When Ehime Railway was nationalised on 1 October 1933, Japanese Government Railways renamed the station Iyo-Shirataki after a multi-tiered waterfall in the nearby Shirataki Park. The line was re-gauged to 1,067 mm in October 1935 and folded into the Yosan Main Line. Limited-express services stopped calling once the Uchiko shortcut opened in March 1986. After the 1 April 1987 privatisation, control passed to JR Shikoku, which assigned the station the line code "S14".
History summarized from Japanese & English Wikipedia · last reviewed 2026-05-22.
Notes
The driveway-side pond next to the station building keeps live goldfish; on 23 November each year the station gains temporary staff for the local Ruri-hime festival in Shirataki Park.