Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE V— - RAIL PROGRAMS › Part PART B— - ASSISTANCE › Chapter CHAPTER 229— - RAIL IMPROVEMENT GRANTS › § 22902
The Secretary of Transportation can give grants to help pay for big costs to build or improve stations, tracks, signals, and trains needed for intercity passenger rail service. To get a grant, a project must be in a State rail plan or the plan required by the Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of 2008. Applicants must show they have the legal, financial, and technical ability to do the project, keep control of the facilities and equipment, and maintain them. The Secretary will pick projects that clearly improve service (more riders, better on-time performance, faster trips, more frequent trains), help reduce highway or air congestion, are likely to succeed, and give good benefits compared to the federal money requested. Extra weight is given to projects that connect with other transport modes, help freight or commuter rail, use positive train control, protect the environment, create jobs, or bring in nonfederal money. If an applicant did not choose an operator in a competitive way, they must explain why their choice is best. Federal grant money generally may cover up to 80 percent of a project’s net capital cost. Up to 20 percent of the nonfederal share may come from other federal transportation funds. The Secretary will favor projects asking for a smaller federal share. Certain matching credits are available, not exceeding $15,000,000 per fiscal year, under formulas for fiscal years 2009–2012 based on past capital and operating spending (50 percent of specified averages and increases as described in the law). Funds stay available until spent, but any grant money not used for the project within 2 years after the State gets it must be returned for other rail projects. The Secretary may issue letters of intent for future funding, but must notify Congress 30 days in advance and the letters are not binding until money is actually appropriated. Projects with grants over $1,000,000,000 face extra rules: proof of the nonfederal match, a financial plan before work after final design, a usable independent segment or equipment, and a requirement to maintain the project for 20 years or refund a pro‑rata share if it is not kept for at least 12 months. The Secretary must set final application rules within 2 years after the 2008 Act and give interim guidance until then. Grants may also be used to provide bike and recreational equipment space and storage on trains.
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Citation
49 U.S.C. § 22902
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73