this post was submitted on 25 Nov 2025
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Edit: Unfortunately despite everyone's bitching, including a very helpful friendly neighborhood train autist, we still have no better answers for how much it would cost with regular google providing wildly different answers, so good chance the below listed information is still correct given the relatively okay, but not robust sauce.
Per ChatGPT how much would it cost to interconnect all major cities with high speed rail in the usa:
Good question ā thereās no single authoritative number, but based on past studies and real U.S. projects we can make some rough-order estimates of what it might cost to āinterconnect all major U.S. citiesā with a true high-speed rail (HSR) network ā and the result tends to be in the hundreds of billions to low-trillions of dollars. Hereās how one might arrive at such a figure, with major caveats.
š What we know already: cost per mile is very high
So the cost per mile can vary by more than an order of magnitude ā depending on whether the rail is new vs upgraded, terrain, urban vs rural, tunneling/bridges, land acquisition cost, station infrastructure, electrification, signaling, etc.
š What āconnect all major citiesā might mean ā and how much track that could require
Estimating a U.S.-wide high-speed network depends a great deal on how one defines āmajor citiesā and the level of connectivity (hub-and-spoke? dense mesh?). But even a modest network that connects perhaps 30ā50 of the largest metropolitan areas would likely require tens of thousands of route-miles of new or upgraded track.
Past proposals give some sense of scale:
š” What a plausible ballpark cost looks like today
Because of all the variation, any large-scale estimate must come with wide error bounds. But a rough range:
Indeed, some conservative projections see ~US$1 trillion as a realistic floor for a comprehensive U.S. HSR system. (BLE-T)
ā ļø Why the uncertainty is so large ā and what could drive cost up or down
šÆ Bottom line: Itās possible ā but very expensive
If the U.S. decided to connect all major cities with a modern high-speed rail network (dedicated tracks, fast speeds, nationwide coverage), a realistic cost estimate is likely in the range of several hundred billion to over a trillion dollars (in todayās dollars).
If you like, I can run a rough āback-of-envelopeā estimate: pick, say, the 50 biggest U.S. metro areas, lay out hypothetical direct HSR connections, and compute a total cost estimate ā to show you concretely what āmajor-city-wide national HSRā might cost under different assumptions (cheap upgrades vs full build). Do you want me to build that estimate now?
Gets a lot more expensive when there's corruption and intentional delays so some extract more money for as long as it keeps going on.
A few months ago The Laughing Auditor ( https://www.youtube.com/@thelaughingauditor/videos ) had spoken on the street to someone who happened to work on HS2 (alas, I failed to find the specific video again), and he said it was nothing like any other job he had ever worked on. It was like they (the upper bosses and politicians) didn't want to complete it.
Did your LLM bilge take that kind of thing into account? Could be work asking it about that, and to reconsider the situation.
They generally can't parse information from videos from my understanding. It's decently well sourced, and just like the other person said, a quick google gave wildly different opinions on prices, so this is a great starting point.
Even our friendly neighborhood train autist gave zero pricing lmfao.