Title 23 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAYS › § 165
Provides exact highway money for Puerto Rico and for four U.S. territories for fiscal years 2022–2026. Puerto Rico gets: $173,010,000 for 2022; $176,960,000 for 2023; $180,120,000 for 2024; $183,675,000 for 2025; and $187,230,000 for 2026. The territories together get: $45,990,000 for 2022; $47,040,000 for 2023; $47,880,000 for 2024; $48,825,000 for 2025; and $49,770,000 for 2026. The Puerto Rico money must be given to Puerto Rico for its highway program. For penalty rules, the money is treated as if it were split among older programs the way Puerto Rico’s 1997 shares were under sections 104(b) and 144 (as in effect for fiscal year 1997). Amounts tied to the national highway system, the surface transportation block grant program, and Interstate maintenance are treated half for the national highway performance program and half for the surface transportation program for penalty purposes. Each year at least 50% of Puerto Rico’s funds must go to projects allowed under section 119, at least 25% must go to projects allowed under section 148, and the rest can be used for other chapter 1 activities and preventive maintenance on the National Highway System. Unless the law specifically says otherwise, Puerto Rico cannot get funds that are apportioned to States. “Territory” means American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The Secretary may run a program to help each territory build and improve arterial and collector highways and needed inter‑island connectors that the territory’s leader picks and the Secretary approves. The federal share follows section 120(g). A territory cannot use its funds until its chief executive signs an agreement with the Secretary to follow the rules, use approved design standards, keep finished roads in good condition, and follow approved traffic standards. The agreement must describe the technical help, information sharing, and oversight, and must be reviewed at least every 2 years; old agreements stay in force until replaced. Territory funds may be used only for certain projects and activities such as eligible surface transportation block grant projects, cost‑effective preventive maintenance (per section 116(e)), ferries and terminals (per section 129(b) and (c)), planning and financing studies, safety and economic studies, regulation and fair taxation of highway use, and related research and development. Funds may not be used for routine maintenance, and most territorial projects cannot be built on roads officially classified as local.
Full Legal Text
Highways — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
23 U.S.C. § 165
Title 23 — Highways
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73