Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE III— - GENERAL AND INTERMODAL PROGRAMS › Chapter CHAPTER 67— - MULTIMODAL INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS › § 6701
Provides a DOT grant program that will give competitive federal money to help build very large transportation projects. Department means the Department of Transportation. Secretary means the Secretary of Transportation. Eligible entity means a State or group of States, a metropolitan planning organization, a unit of local government, a political subdivision, a special purpose district or public authority with a transportation role (including port authorities), a Tribal government or consortium, a partnership with Amtrak, or a group of these. State includes the several States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Northern Mariana Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and other U.S. territories. Eligible projects include big highway or bridge work on national freight or highway networks, freight intermodal or rail projects that give public benefit, grade separations, intercity passenger rail, public transit projects tied to the above, or groups of connected projects. Projects must have expected eligible costs of at least $500,000,000, except a special set-aside covers projects more than $100,000,000 but less than $500,000,000. Applicants must apply when and how the Secretary requires and include a plan to collect and analyze project data. The Secretary will pick projects that show national or regional economic, mobility, or safety benefits; need large federal help; are cost-effective; have stable nonfederal funding for construction and future costs; and have legal, financial, and technical capacity. The Secretary will score projects on things like state of good repair, avoided costs, maintenance savings, safety, improved movement of people or freight, environmental and resilience benefits, and economic and job effects. The Secretary must try to reach geographic spread and a balance of rural and urban projects, and will give priority to projects rated “highly recommended.” Grants can pay for planning, environmental review, design, land, construction, mitigation, equipment, and related costs. A grant may cover up to 60 percent of eligible project costs, and total federal help for a project may not exceed 80 percent of total cost; certain locally repaid federal loans count as local share. If a multiyear grant is used, the agreement will set the federal share, schedule, and completion time, and full single-year funding is allowed only after required NEPA reviews are finished. The law authorizes $2,000,000,000 per year for fiscal years 2022 through 2026. Half of each year’s funds are set aside for projects between $100,000,000 and $500,000,000. Up to 2 percent of annual funds may be used for program administration and staff, and those admin funds can be transferred to relevant modal agencies. The Secretary must publish selection methods within 90 days of the chapter’s enactment, notify two congressional committees 30 days before announcing selected projects, publish a public report within 60 days after grants are announced, and the Comptroller General must assess the selection process and report within 18 months of the first awards. Projects must follow civil rights, procurement, and environmental laws and meet modal-specific requirements.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
49 U.S.C. § 6701
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73