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The new NextGen Acela trains promise faster travel and more seats – but arrive as US rail faces an uncertain future

The new NextGen Acela trains promise faster travel and more seats – but arrive as US rail faces an uncertain future

  • The new NextGen Acela trains are set to start running on the Northeast Corridor soon, promising faster travel and more seats, but arrive at a time when US rail faces an uncertain future.
  • The trains were years in development due to mechanical defects and failed simulation tests mandated by the Federal Railroad Administration, and their launch coincides with a chaotic year of disruptions for Amtrak operations.
  • NextGen Acela promises an American rail renaissance, but its top velocity of 160 mph falls short of global benchmarks set by China’s Fuxing and Japan’s newest Shinkansens, which reach 217 mph and 200 mph respectively.
  • The new train features a lightweight design, faster acceleration, and lower energy consumption, as well as an upgraded onboard experience with winged headrests, seat-side USB ports, and 5G Wi-Fi, and can seat 82 more passengers than its predecessor.
  • Despite the challenges facing US rail, NextGen Acela’s launch is seen as a positive development for Amtrak’s corridor region, which is experiencing record ridership and economic growth, with projects such as a new maintenance shop and a generational overhaul of 30th Street Station underway.

The new Acela trains are scheduled to start running on the Northeast Corridor soon. Courtesy of Amtrak

When former President Joe Biden unveiled his US$1.9 trillion infrastructure plan in 2021, he found the perfect place to go public: Philadelphia’s 30th Street Station rail yard.

Over the din of crackling wires and grumbling engines, the president made his case for revitalizing the country’s roads, ports, airports and rail lines.

Behind Biden sat rows of gleaming Amtrak trains. Among them was a prototype of NextGen Acela, a sleek machine engineered to deliver the fastest passenger service in American history.

On Aug. 28, 2025, NextGen will finally hit the rails, after years of delays.

As the author of a book on the Northeast Corridor, the rail line that connects Boston, New York, Philadelphia and Washington, I know this new train cannot come soon enough for many seaboard riders, even though it launches at a time of diminished political will for passenger rail.

Interior of modern train with seats with red headrests

Red headrests distinguish first-class cars from business class on the NextGen Acela trains.
Courtesy of Amtrak

Rail renaissance under fire

The French-designed, American-manufactured NextGen arrives years late due to mechanical defects and failed simulation tests mandated by the Federal Railroad Administration. The new Acela will begin whisking passengers along the corridor after a chaotic year that saw downed wires, busted circuit breakers and brushfires disrupt Amtrak operations.

Gone is Amtrak’s White House champion, railfan-in-chief Biden, replaced by Donald Trump, whose one-time adviser, Elon Musk, called Amtrak a “sad situation,” and who proposed replacing the government-owned carrier with private competitors.

Man in suit and blue baseball cap speaks behind a lectern in front of a train with an urban skyline in the background

Former President Joe Biden delivers remarks at an Amtrak 50th anniversary event in Philadelphia in 2021.
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner resigned in March 2025, and, in May, Amtrak cut 450 employee positions.

NextGen Acela promises an American rail renaissance in a moment when federally sponsored trains are fighting for their lives, as Biden’s infrastructure ambitions fall to an administration bent on cutting government costs.

These contradictions, however, are nothing new.

Not-so-fast trains

America’s love-hate relationship with fast trains stretches back to October 1964, when Japanese National Railways opened its Shinkansen high-speed line between Tokyo and Osaka.

Japan’s iconic 130-mph bullet train entranced audiences, many of whom saw footage of the new service during televised coverage of the Tokyo Olympics.

High-speed bullet train crosses bridge between skyscrapers

A Shinkansen high-speed bullet train passes through Tokyo.
Richard A. Brooks/AFP via Getty Images

Americans wanted their own bullet train but were reluctant to pay the massive infrastructural costs of a Shinkansen system. When Congress passed the High-Speed Ground Transportation Act of 1965, it prioritized the development of trains over the reconstruction of tracks, power systems and maintenance facilities.

The resulting services underperformed.

On Dec. 20, 1967, a gas turbine train manufactured by United Aircraft topped 170 mph while testing in New Jersey. But when the so-called TurboTrain entered service, it managed an average pace of just 63 mph on the weaving track between New York and Boston.

The electric-powered Metroliner, which began service in 1969, boasted similar potential but rarely held triple-digit speeds in service and broke down so often that its carrier, the Penn Central Railroad, struggled to keep the trains running between New York and Washington.

Historians usually regard these high-speed forays as resounding failures.

But riders loved them.

Technical flaws aside, both the TurboTrain and Metroliner were a hit with northeastern riders, so much so that Amtrak retained the Metroliner brand until 2006, long after it had retired the ‘60s-era trains.

Reflecting in 1999, rail journalist Don Phillips expressed disbelief “that those dogs were actually popular with the riding public.”

The birth of Acela

Amtrak opened a new era of high-speed rail in 2000 when it launched Acela Express.

Derived from France’s acclaimed TGV design, Acela carries passengers at speeds up to 150 mph on the Northeast Corridor.

Like the Metroliner before it, Acela suffered from design problems and mechanical faults, including cracked yaw dampers and brake discs, which temporarily sidelined the trains.

Rail writer Joseph Vranich described Acela as both “Amtrak’s crown jewel” and a “remarkable fiasco.”

And yet riders flocked to the service. Acela became one of Amtrak’s most popular and lucrative trains – so attractive that it lured business travelers off regional airlines.

When Acela entered service in 2000, Amtrak trains claimed just 37% of air-rail traffic between New York and Washington. By 2021, it had 83%. Between New York and Boston, that figure jumped from 20% to 75%.

Passengers stand on platform waiting to board a train

Acela trains are popular and lucrative for Amtrak, in part because they draw so many business travelers.
Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images

Acela 2.0

Now, NextGen Acela takes up the fraught legacy of American high-speed rail. What can we expect of the new train?

NextGen is faster than the original Acela but will not set any world speed records. Its top velocity of 160 mph falls short of global benchmarks set by China’s Fuxing, which hits 217 mph, and Japan’s newest Shinkansens, which reach 200 mph.

With better tracks and signals, NextGen could conceivably ramp up to 186 mph, though such speeds won’t be possible anytime soon.

For now, NextGen will make do with an imperfect corridor. The train’s lightweight design means faster acceleration and lower energy consumption. An enhanced dynamic tilting system will let carriages lean into curves on the corridor’s twisting track, so they lose less speed on turns. The original Acela also tilted, but not as much.

Modern white-and-red bathroom with changing table open

The NextGen Acela bathrooms are more spacious and have more touchless features than the previous design.
Courtesy of Amtrak

The upgraded onboard experience includes winged headrests, seat-side USB ports and 5G Wi-Fi. More importantly, each NextGen train can seat 82 more passengers than its predecessor. When Amtrak’s full fleet of 28 NextGens enters service, sending the first-generation trains into retirement, Acela service capacity will have increased by 4,728 seats.

This figure may be the train’s greatest achievement in a congested region at a time when Amtrak is posting record ridership.

The effects of the Northeast’s post-pandemic passenger surge are nowhere more visible than the Philadelphia rail yard where Biden spoke four years ago. Amtrak is constructing a new maintenance shop beside the Schuylkill River that will service NextGen trains and cement Philly’s role in the railroad’s addition of a million annual seats to its non-Acela corridor trains. Powered by conventional electric locomotives, these slower, cheaper “Regionals” accounted for 77% of corridor ridership in 2024 and will continue to carry the bulk of northeastern passengers.

Meanwhile, a quarter-mile south of the maintenance shop, America’s third-busiest passenger hub, 30th Street Station, is receiving a generational overhaul with a new food court, exterior plaza, shops and underground access to rapid transit.

These projects demonstrate the economic power of fast, frequent trains in Philly and throughout trackside communities of the Northeast. America’s embattled but resilient high-speed rail tradition may never be the world’s best, but even incremental improvements, like NextGen, cannot help but transform the places they serve.

For Amtrak’s corridor region, the stakes have never been higher.

Read more of our stories about Philadelphia.

The Conversation

David Alff is a member of the Empire State Passenger Association.

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Q. When will the new NextGen Acela trains start running on the Northeast Corridor?
A. The new NextGen Acela trains are scheduled to start running on the Northeast Corridor soon, with the first train hitting the rails on August 28, 2025.

Q. What is the top speed of the new NextGen Acela trains?
A. The top speed of the new NextGen Acela trains is 160 mph, which falls short of global benchmarks set by China’s Fuxing and Japan’s newest Shinkansens.

Q. How many more passengers can each NextGen train seat compared to its predecessor?
A. Each NextGen train can seat 82 more passengers than its predecessor.

Q. What is the total increase in Acela service capacity when Amtrak’s full fleet of 28 NextGens enters service?
A. The total increase in Acela service capacity will be 4,728 seats.

Q. Why did the development of high-speed rail in the US face delays and mechanical defects?
A. The development of high-speed rail in the US faced delays and mechanical defects due to mechanical defects and failed simulation tests mandated by the Federal Railroad Administration.

Q. What is the name of the French-designed train that inspired the NextGen Acela trains?
A. The French-designed train that inspired the NextGen Acela trains is called TGV.

Q. How did Amtrak’s White House champion, former President Joe Biden, impact the development of high-speed rail in the US?
A. Former President Joe Biden was a strong supporter of high-speed rail and played a key role in promoting its development in the US.

Q. What is the name of the train that was launched by Amtrak in 2000 to mark the beginning of a new era of high-speed rail in the US?
A. The train that was launched by Amtrak in 2000 to mark the beginning of a new era of high-speed rail in the US is called Acela Express.

Q. How did riders respond to the original Acela trains, despite their technical flaws?
A. Riders loved the original Acela trains, despite their technical flaws, and they became one of Amtrak’s most popular and lucrative trains.