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Midwest Rail Ridership is Booming, but How Far Can It Grow?

New report highlights future challenges for passenger rail in the Midwest - not enough seats to meet demand

By Kevin Brubaker, Chief Operations Officer & Deputy Director

Good news: Midwest rail service is booming, with 8% year to date ridership growth, surpassing our “competitors” in New York, California, and North Carolina. Thanks to the new Borealis rail service between Chicago and the Twin Cities, Midwest travelers have additional rail travel options and are taking them. And we’re about 98% of the way back to pre-COVID travel levels, which we’ll likely hit by late 2026.

Bar chart shows Chicago area trains' growth rate exceeded peer regions' and the national average, even when excluding Borealis/Hiawatha service, Chicago's growth averaged 4.1% above all but NC-VA.

Bad news: We’re about to hit our peak. With most trains already running at near capacity, there simply aren’t enough seats left to fill with would-be passengers. Trains are regularly sold out during peak periods. And while seat may be available between, say, Carbondale and Champaign that seat is likely sold between Champaign and Chicago. The system is functionally near capacity.

Bar chart shows Chicago area trains recorded the highest load factor (defined as passenger miles of travel divided byseat-miles of service provided) during the first nine months of fiscal year 2025, at 48% among peer regions.

Load factor is defined as passenger miles of travel divided by seat-miles of service provided

These are the findings of a new study by Joe Schwieterman and the Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development at DePaul University.

Importantly, Dr. Schwieterman points to the lack of concrete plans here for new capacity – no new routes, no new frequencies, and no additional train cars. Thus, no ability to meet the latent demand for rail travel. As the authors put it, “State agencies should establish priorities to avoid elongating the timeline of service expansions. Although technical factors may prevent service expansion to Columbus, OH, Green Bay, WI, the Quad Cities, IL, central Iowa, and other points before the end of 2030, it is important to avoid stretching out the timelines further than necessary. Such efforts will build, sustain, and expand the impressive momentum underway in the Chicago Hub.”

We agree.

Kevin Brubaker

Kevin Brubaker,

Chief Operations Officer & Deputy Director

Kevin Brubaker is the deputy director of ELPC, with chief financial management and organizational administrative responsibilities, and leads the organization's transportation work.

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