America Still Has No Bullet Train While Other Countries Hit 200 MPH


The United States helped invent modern rail travel. But in 2026, America still does not have a true 200-mph passenger train while more than 20 countries already do.
The biggest example is the troubled California High-Speed Rail, first approved by voters in 2008. The promise sounded simple.
A train connecting Los Angeles and San Francisco in under three hours. The price tag was supposed to be $33 billion. The opening date was supposed to be 2020.
Today the reality looks very different.
Costs have exploded past $125 billion, the full route is nowhere near completion, and the first operating section may only connect Bakersfield and Merced by 2033.
Critics say that is a huge downgrade from the original promise.
Congressman Vince Fong called the project a symbol of government waste. Transportation officials admit early plans underestimated the real cost and complexity.
So what went wrong?
Several major problems slowed the project:
- Land disputes involving thousands of property owners
- Environmental reviews that triggered lawsuits
- High labor and construction costs compared to other countries
- Political fights that affected funding
- Massive funding gaps still estimated near $90 billion
Even supporters admit the financing was never fully secured when construction started.
Meanwhile, private company Brightline is trying a different strategy. Its trains already operate between Miami and Orlando, reaching about 125 mph.
The company now plans a true high-speed line between Los Angeles and Las Vegas that could hit 200 mph by 2029.
Still, even that project faces financial risks and questions about whether Americans will switch from cars and planes to trains.
The bigger issue may be cultural.
Countries like Japan, France, and China built high-speed rail because governments committed long term funding and national support.
In the U.S., projects often change direction when politics change.
Some experts say the real difference comes down to one decision.
Other countries decided high-speed rail was essential. America still is not sure.