The Northeast Northeast Corridor Amtrak officials released a concept report for next-generation high-speed rail within the
Northeast Corridor (NEC) on October 1, 2010. Amtrak projected planning and construction of the next-generation high-speed Northeast Corridor line to cost approximately $117 billion (2010 dollars) and reduce the travel time from New York to Washington, including a stop in Philadelphia, to 96 minutes, and the travel time from Boston to New York to 84 minutes by 2040. In 2012, Amtrak released the details of the proposal. The first of two phases envisions the
NEC to be upgraded allowing
Acela speed improvements. By 2022, Acela trainsets were to be replaced with new trainsets, named
Avelia Liberty, but this has since been pushed out to 2025. The new trainsets will be limited to the maximum speed supported by the NEC. In 2012, the
Federal Railroad Administration began developing a master plan for bringing high-speed rail to the Northeast Corridor titled NEC FUTURE, and released the final
environmental impact statement in December 2016. The proposed alignment would closely follow the existing NEC south of New York City; multiple potential alignments north of New York City were studied, including the existing shoreline route, a route through
Hartford, Connecticut, and a route out along
Long Island which would traverse a
new bridge or tunnel across
Long Island Sound to Connecticut. On July 12, 2017, the Federal Railroad Administration revealed the record of decision for the project. The proposed upgrades have not been funded. In 2023, the
Federal Railroad Administration awarded $16.4 billion for 25 projects of significance along the
Northeast Corridor, rebuilding tunnels and bridges, upgrading tracks, power systems, signals, stations, and other infrastructure. In 2024, following continuous efforts by the
Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the
Federal Railroad Administration made $2 billion available for projects along the
Northeast Corridor. The first phase, costing $23.5 billion, would: • Modernize the
New Haven Line from
New Haven to
Manhattan, completing improvements to make the journey time shorter • Complete the East-West rail link between Boston and
Springfield, Massachusetts • Double track and electrify the
Danbury and
Waterbury branches, as well as the
New Haven–Springfield Line in
Connecticut • Extend the Danbury Branch to
Pittsfield, Massachusetts • Modernize
LIRR service between the
Oyster Bay and
Greenport branches • Create a new electrified commuter rail line from
Concord, New Hampshire, to Boston • Create fast and frequent high speed rail service between
Kingston, Rhode Island, and Boston • Upgrade the
Valley Flyer from Springfield, Massachusetts, to
Brattleboro, Vermont • Electrify the
Newburyport/Rockport,
Haverhill,
Fairmount and
Lowell Lines in Massachusetts
New York (blue), as designated by the
Federal Railroad Administration New York has been actively discussing high-speed rail service since the 1990s, but thus far little progress has been made. Amtrak
Acela service between
Washington, D.C., and
Boston is available to
New York City, but other cities remain isolated from high-speed rail service. Further, destinations outside the
New York metropolitan area have been plagued by delayed service for decades. Nonetheless, New York has been quietly endorsing and even implementing rail improvements for years. Closer and faster railroad transportation links between New York City and the rest of the state are frequently cited as a partial solution to Upstate's stagnant economic growth. Beginning in 2010, a study conducted by the
New York State Department of Transportation identified 10 alternatives for improving the
Empire Corridor. In early 2014, a Tier 1 Draft
Environmental Impact Statement was released for public review and comments. The draft eliminated 5 of the alternatives, including those with top speeds of . The remaining 5 build alternatives under consideration have top speeds of (the base alternative), (options A and B), , and .
Pennsylvania The
Keystone Corridor is a rail corridor between
Philadelphia and
Pittsburgh, composed of two different rail lines, the
Amtrak Philadelphia to Harrisburg Main Line and the
Norfolk Southern Pittsburgh Line. Between Philadelphia and
Harrisburg the Amtrak line is electrified and grade separation was completed in 2014. Between Harrisburg and Pittsburgh the Norfolk Southern owned line is used for freight transportation. In 1999, the Keystone Corridor was formally recognized as a "designated high-speed corridor" by the
Federal Railroad Administration (FRA). The line, over which Amtrak's
Pennsylvanian and
Keystone Service routes operate, was upgraded in 2006 with two segments of track. These trains are
higher-speed rail services between Philadelphia and Harrisburg, with express service taking 95–100 minutes over .
Western States California '' (formerly Desert Xpress) to
Las Vegas California Proposition 1A, passed in November 2008, authorized the state to issue $9.95 billion in bonds to fund the first phase of a planned multi-phase high-speed rail network. Conventional steel-wheel on rail technology is the adopted mode with trains traveling at speeds of up to . Los Angeles to San Francisco via the
Central Valley was expected to be the first phase of the network, though the initial operating segments have since become unclear. The
California High-Speed Rail Authority (CHSRA) is the lead agency charged with planning and implementing the system. The state was awarded $2.55 billion in funding from the federal government in 2010. Since the passage of Proposition 1A, cost estimates for the project have risen due to increased planning and disputes over routes. Ridership projections have faced scrutiny by a number of groups including the Reason Foundation. In May 2013, with cost estimates double the original figures approved by the voters in 2008, opponents filed lawsuits intended to invalidate the $10 billion bond measures which were part of the financing of the rail line. By December 2018, the Authority had of
right-of-way from Madera to near Bakersfield under contract and in construction. Governor
Gavin Newsom has still expressed support for the project despite the funding shortfall, reduced scope, and swelling costs, which by 2023 were estimated in $128 billion. XpressWest, a private undertaking begun in 2005 to build a high-speed service to
Las Vegas,
Nevada, was acquired by
Brightline in 2018 and its name changed to
Brightline West. In April 2020, The California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank approved $3.25 billion in tax-exempt private activity bonds for the project and acquired a 50-year lease from
Caltrans for use of the
Interstate 15 corridor. The line, from
Rancho Cucamonga station to a
station near the
Las Vegas Strip, was expected to open in 2028 in time for the
2028 Summer Olympics, but is now expected to begin service in September 2029, too late to coincide with the Olympics. Following the awarding of a $3 billion federal grant in December 2023, Although the
Surf Line between Los Angeles to San Diego, which hosts the
Pacific Surfliner and commuter rail routes such as
Metrolink and
Coaster, has portions in Orange County and San Diego County that contains Class 5 trackage, which passenger trains can reach speeds up to , it would not be considered a high-speed rail line. However, there are plans to upgrade those stretches of track to Class 6 trackage, in which passenger trains can reach speeds up to , similar to portions of other passenger rail routes in the United States such as Lincoln Service between Chicago and St. Louis and portions of the Brightline West between West Palm Beach and Cocoa, Florida. As of 2024, funding has yet to be available.
Pacific Northwest The Pacific Northwest Corridor or the Pacific Northwest Rail Corridor is one of eleven federally designated high-speed rail corridors in the
United States. It was designated a high-speed rail by the
Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA). Improvements proposed in Washington State's long range plan would have had passenger trains operating at a maximum speed of on line. The Cascadia high-speed rail was a proposed dedicated high-speed rail line that would have connected
Salem/
Portland,
Vancouver WA/
Olympia/
Tacoma/
Seattle/
Everett, and
Bellingham, Washington. As of 2012, neither the
Washington State Department of Transportation nor Oregon plan to implement speeds higher than due to safety and other freight service concerns voiced by the track owner,
Union Pacific Railroad. The plan to provide high-speed and
higher-speed rail services on this corridor was thus halted. Upgraded services would include the
Amtrak Cascades, which operates along the corridor. In early 2018, Washington State pledged money to studying ultra-high-speed rail between Vancouver BC, Seattle, and Portland with speed operation. After a preliminary study, the state pledged $300,000 in funding and was shortly backed by British Columbia. The study was estimated to be completed by early 2019. Washington State Governor
Jay Inslee has expressed his desire to see a Cascadia innovation corridor, linking together the main economic centers of the Pacific Northwest.
Mid-Atlantic and the South Florida map of the Florida High-Speed Corridor Development of a high-speed rail system in Florida was mandated by a constitutional referendum in 2000 but taken off the books by another referendum in 2004. Florida resurrected its high-speed rail authority to capitalize on the nationwide effort to build a high-speed rail network. Florida legislature approved
SunRail in a special session in late 2009, which along with work already completed on the originally proposed line between
Tampa and
Orlando, was instrumental in the state winning a significant amount of the total amount allotted to high-speed rail. Only California received more high-speed rail funding than Florida. In February 2011, Florida's newly elected governor
Rick Scott cancelled the project. Secretary of Transportation
Ray LaHood then announced he would be redirecting the funds intended for Florida to other states. In 2012, a plan for a
high-speed rail from Miami to Orlando to be operated by a privately owned developer was announced. The plan, called
All Aboard Florida, included a segment between
Cocoa and Orlando with a top speed of . The plan was later renamed
Brightline, and began service between Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach on January 13, 2018, and to Miami on May 19, 2018, although only at speeds up to . On September 22, 2023, service to Orlando with speeds up to on dedicated tracks, and on shared tracks began. In November 2023, most of the 90 mph sections were upgraded to 110 mph following approval by the FRA for these higher speeds.
Southeast The
Southeast High-Speed Rail Corridor is a passenger rail transportation project to extend high-speed passenger rail services from
Washington, D.C., south through
Richmond and
Petersburg in
Virginia through
Raleigh and
Charlotte in
North Carolina and connect with the existing high-speed rail corridor from DC to
Boston, Massachusetts known as the
Northeast Corridor. Since first established in 1992, the
U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) has since extended the corridor to
Atlanta and
Macon, Georgia;
Greenville, South Carolina;
Columbia, South Carolina;
Jacksonville, Florida; and
Birmingham, Alabama.
Incremental rail improvements to existing rail lines have been taking place while the
environmental impact study required under the
National Environmental Policy Act is being completed. The two-tiered EIS began in 1999, and completion was expected in 2011, with passenger service expected by 2015 to 2020, depending upon funding availability.
Atlanta–Charlotte Corridor Another project has been proposed between Atlanta and Charlotte; it is planned to be in service by 2050. The estimated cost to establish a new high-speed corridor between the two cities was between $6.2 billion to $8.4 billion in 2021 when the preferred route, running from
Charlotte Gateway Station to
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, was selected.
Texas In 1991, the Texas High-Speed Rail Authority awarded a 50-year high-speed rail franchise to the Texas TGV Corporation — a consortium of
Morrison-Knudsen (US),
Bombardier (Canada),
Alstom (France/UK),
Crédit Lyonnais (France),
Banque IndoSuez (France),
Merrill Lynch (USA), and others. Texas TGV won the franchise after more than two years of litigation instigated by a rival consortium backing German
ICE technology. The plan was to connect the "Texas Triangle" (
Houston −
Dallas/Fort Worth −
San Antonio) with a privately financed high-speed train system which would quickly take passengers from one city to the next at prices designed to compete with or beat other transport options. This was the same model
Southwest Airlines used 20 years earlier to break into the Texas market where it served the same three cities. Funding for the project was to come entirely from private sources, since Texas did not allow the use of public money. The original estimated cost was $5.6 billion, but the task of securing the necessary private funds proved extremely difficult. Southwest Airlines, with the help of lobbyists, created legal barriers to prohibit the consortium from moving forward and the entire project was eventually scuttled in 1994, when the State of Texas withdrew the franchise. Several hotel chains like
Days Inn,
Best Western, and
La Quinta Inn, as well as fast food establishments like
McDonald's and
Burger King lobbied against the plan, In 2002, the Texas High-Speed Rail and Transportation Corporation (THSRTC), a grass roots organization dedicated to bringing high-speed rail to
Texas was established. In 2006,
American Airlines and
Continental Airlines formally joined THSRTC, in an effort to bring high-speed rail to Texas as a passenger collector system for the airlines. The Texas High-Speed Rail and Transportation Corporation developed the Texas T-Bone and Brazos Express corridors to link Central Texas. The state also received another grant in 2011 to start engineering and environmental work on a high-speed link between Houston and Dallas. Another study was being conducted in 2012 by TxDOT on a possible link between Houston and Austin. While the preliminary work was in progress by TxDOT for the Houston to Dallas line, an unrelated project to build a high-speed railway between the two cities was announced in 2011 by a private company, Lone Star High-Speed Rail. The company was founded in 2009 by U.S. Japan High-Speed Rail to market the use of
N700-I bullet train in Texas. In 2012, the company with a new name,
Texas Central Railway Company, announced that
Central Japan Railway Company signed up to be the primary investor in the project with the total estimated cost of $10 billion to be privately funded. The preliminary engineering, market and financing studies have been started for the service with maximum speed of 205 miles per hour and travel time of 90 minutes. The plan was to seek additional investors in late 2012, start the construction in 2014, and begin the service in 2024.
Chattanooga–Atlanta Corridor The
Georgia Department of Transportation has completed a Tier 1
Environmental impact assessment on a high speed rail line between Chattanooga and Atlanta, and will move forward with a Tier 2 environmental impact assessment, to be completed by 2030. The system is intended to be a steel-wheel on steel train or a
maglev train system.
New developments On September 21, 2020, a high-speed train from Houston to Dallas received federal approval. The railroad aims to cut travel time between the two cities to 90 minutes. According to the company in charge of the project, Texas Central Railroad, the Federal Railroad Administration approved construction to begin in early 2021. The company estimates that construction could take up to six years and cost roughly $20 billion. Engineering and infrastructure development company, AECOM, has emerged as one of the top companies to steer-head the potential project. AECOM recently partnered with technology companies Virgin Hyperloop One and Arrivo to begin consulting with local city and state governments about urban planning. Steven Duong, the head urban planner for AECOM, claimed that cross-state high-speed rail as a system of transportation with both passengers and freight is "reasonable".
Midwest Illinois and the Midwest The
Midwest Regional Rail Initiative or
Midwest Regional Rail System (
MRRI,
MWRRI, or
MWRRS) is a plan to implement a passenger rail network in the
Midwestern United States, using
Chicago,
Illinois as a hub. Primary routes would stretch across Illinois,
Indiana,
Michigan,
Minnesota,
Ohio, and
Wisconsin, possibly reaching
Kentucky. Secondary routes would operate at a slower speed across
Missouri and
Iowa, just touching
Nebraska and nearly reaching
Kansas. With some upgrades already completed, trains regularly travel at for significant distances in Michigan and Illinois. Construction to provide
higher-speed rail services between
Chicago and St. Louis was completed in 2023. The Chicago–St. Louis rail line was upgraded so passenger trains are able to reach top speeds of between
Alton, Illinois and
Joliet, Illinois. Illinois has been one of the most aggressive states in pursuing high-speed rail, receiving $1.1 billion in 2010. The first installment of funds provided for construction between Alton and Lincoln. In March 2011, the next installment of funds ($685 million) provided for another section to go from Lincoln to Dwight. In May 2011, additional funds were allocated for further construction between Dwight and Joliet. Legislation passed in 2013 gives the
Illinois Tollway the power to build high-speed rail lines. Plans called for eventually investing in true high-speed travel that would boost train speeds to . As a result of upgrades that begin in 2001, trains in Michigan now travel at for between
Porter, Indiana and
Kalamazoo, Michigan and for between Kalamazoo and
Albion, Michigan. On May 9, 2011, the state received $196.5 million to extend the higher speed rail upgrades from Kalamazoo an additional to
Dearborn, Michigan. The improvements would reduce the travel time from Chicago to Detroit to roughly 5 hours. Michigan had received more than $161 million for high-speed rail and $40 million for Amtrak stations in Troy, Battle Creek and Dearborn. About of the Michigan trains' route passes through a congested area of northwestern Indiana along Lake Michigan's south shore, where trains are regularly delayed by freight traffic. In early 2010 the federal government authorized some $71.4 million for this project. In Minnesota, there was a proposed high-speed rail service from
Rochester to the
Twin Cities called
Zip Rail. The trains would run on a dedicated track at speeds between . Zip Rail was proposed to be a
public–private partnership with public funding for capital costs and private investment for operations, maintenance and growing ridership. The Zip Rail project was discontinued in 2016. In July 2021, after
Positive Train Control was installed and tested, Amtrak trains (
Lincoln Service and
Texas Eagle) were allowed to run at on a large part of the Chicago-St. Louis corridor, between Joliet and Alton. As a result, scheduled travel times between Chicago and St. Louis were reduced by about 15 minutes when Amtrak timetables were adjusted in December 2021. Final approval for speeds was granted in May 2023, and
higher-speed rail service began on Wednesday, May 3, 2023, reducing travel time by up to an additional 20 minutes.
The Southwest The cities of
Denver,
Las Vegas,
Reno,
Phoenix and
Salt Lake City have formed the Western High Speed Rail Alliance, which is slated to spend $11 million over three years to study the feasibility of building railway links between the major cities of the southwestern United States, as well as linking to the California high-speed corridor via Las Vegas. In June 2012, the developer of XpressWest, formerly known as DesertXpress, announced that they expanded the planned high-speed rail network to include links to Phoenix, Salt Lake City and Denver. The XpressWest plan was supported by the Western High Speed Rail Alliance. == Federal high-speed rail initiatives ==