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?

Send us Fan Mail

Support the show

Podden och tillhörande omslagsbild på den här sidan tillhör Louis & Chris. Innehållet i podden är skapat av Louis & Chris och inte av, eller tillsammans med, Poddtoppen.