Brightline has been held up as proof that private passenger rail can work in the United States and right now it’s also a warning sign. We went to Florida to ride the Miami to Orlando train for ourselves, then pulled the thread on the business model behind the glossy stations and “high speed-ish” branding. What we found is a system with real momentum as well as a very real financial clock ticking in the background.
We unpack how Brightline makes money, starting with the obvious: ticket revenue. From there, we get into the uncomfortable part: roughly $5.5 billion in debt, major infrastructure and station costs, and why even strong ridership growth can still leave a gap once operating expenses and interest payments hit. The result is a future shaped by hard options like bankruptcy, a bond restructuring, or a bailout.
If you’re curious about Brightline, Florida rail, and what this means for high-speed rail in the US, listen now, subscribe for more transit deep dives, and share this with a friend who still thinks trains can’t work here. What do you think Brightline should do next?
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