Current Tube Built
Daily Transbay Trips
Counties Connected
Backup Crossings

Link21 is a program to build a new passenger rail crossing between Oakland and San Francisco under the Bay. It's led by BART and the Capitol Corridor Joint Powers Authority (CCJPA), with support from CalSTA, MTC, and federal agencies.

The current BART Transbay Tube, built in 1974, is the only rail crossing of San Francisco Bay. Even after a $313 million seismic retrofit completed in September 2024, it remains a single point of failure. Transbay ridership is projected to double by 2050, and the current tube cannot handle that growth.

In June 2025, both the BART Board and CCJPA Board voted to advance Link21 as a standard-gauge regional rail project. This is a landmark decision - it means the new tunnel will be compatible with Capitol Corridor, Caltrain, ACE, San Joaquins, and potentially California High-Speed Rail. One crossing connecting the entire Northern California rail network.

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Fast rail connections let people live in more affordable areas (East Bay, Sacramento corridor) while accessing SF/Oakland jobs. This eases housing pressure across the region without building luxury towers in every neighborhood.

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A connected megaregion means a larger labor pool for employers and more job options for workers. Economic studies show transit investments generate $4-6 in economic returns for every $1 spent.

The current transbay tube is a single point of failure. In earthquake country, having only one rail crossing is a serious vulnerability. A second crossing provides critical redundancy for the region's economy.

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Transportation is the Bay Area's #1 source of greenhouse gas emissions. Getting people out of cars and onto trains is one of the most impactful things we can do. Link21 enables a future with far fewer car trips.

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Better transit connections serve communities of color and low-income residents who are most dependent on public transit. Link21 is designed with equity as a core principle, connecting underserved areas to opportunity.

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The Bay Area competes globally with cities like London, Tokyo, and Singapore. Those cities have extensive, integrated rail networks. We need one too if we want to remain competitive and livable.

California has a housing crisis. Cities must build hundreds of thousands of new homes. State law (SB 79, signed October 2025) now requires high-density zoning near transit stations. Every Link21 station automatically unlocks massive housing development potential.

dwelling units/acre allowed within 1/4 mile of a rail station (SB 79)
minimum height limit near Tier 1 transit stops - no city can go lower
5,353
housing units Alameda must build by 2031 - only 12.4% permitted so far

California's High-Speed Rail has been under construction in the Central Valley for over a decade. Cost estimates have grown from $33 billion (2008 Prop 1A) to $126 billion (2026 Business Plan) - a 282% increase. $13.8 billion spent, zero passengers carried, no track laid. The Trump admin pulled $4 billion in federal funding. The Bay Area extension (HSR reaching SF via Gilroy) is targeted for 2038-2039 at earliest - and the $5-6B San Jose-to-Gilroy segment is not funded.

This isn't about defunding high-speed rail. It's about delivering results now. Link21 gives the Bay Area fast, frequent regional rail service a generation before HSR arrives. And every dollar spent on Link21 is a dollar invested in California's complete rail future.

Compatible with Capitol Corridor (Sacramento-Oakland-SJ)
Compatible with Caltrain (SF-South Bay)
Compatible with ACE (Stockton-San Jose)
Compatible with California HSR (when it arrives)
Compatible with San Joaquins (Central Valley)
One tunnel connecting the ENTIRE state rail network

Northern California is growing. New communities, new housing, new jobs. But growth without transit means growth with gridlock. Link21 is the backbone that makes sustainable regional growth possible.

The Solano Rail Hub project is upgrading the Suisun-Fairfield station into a multimodal hub - explicitly described as "a key station in the future Link21 Project." Proposals like the California Forever development (up to 400,000 residents in Solano County) highlight the demand for regional rail in the I-80 corridor. Whether that project is built or not, growth is coming to the corridor - and it needs rail, not more freeway lanes.

Sacramento housing costs are 1/3 of San Francisco's. Link21 makes Sacramento a realistic commute option - fast, frequent trains instead of a 2-hour I-80 crawl. That's a housing solution that doesn't require building towers in every neighborhood. It requires building a tunnel.

ACE and San Joaquins already connect the Central Valley to the Bay Area. Link21 gives those riders a one-seat ride to San Francisco. For Central Valley residents priced out of the Bay, this is a lifeline to jobs without a soul-crushing commute.

Alameda Point's 878-acre development is the East Bay's biggest transit-oriented development opportunity. With 2,696 housing units planned and SB 79 enabling even more density near stations, a Link21 stop here creates a model community: rail + ferry + bus + housing + jobs in one connected hub.

The Economic Case Is Overwhelming

The Bay Area Council Economic Institute projects Link21 would generate 377,000 jobs and $145 billion in economic benefits. The Northern California megaregion's GDP is $875 billion (5% of US GDP). Market analysis shows 45% of all unmet travel demand involves crossing the Bay, and the current Transbay Tube will be at 107% over capacity by 2050. This isn't optional infrastructure - it's economic necessity.

The Risk: Delay and Death by Committee

The original target was 2040. It's already slipped - current documents suggest construction starting ~2039 with full completion in the 2050s. The Bay Area has a history of letting great transit projects stall (BART-to-San Jose took decades). $155M has been spent on planning with $125M to consultants. That money is wasted if the project dies in committee.

Every month of delay costs money (construction inflation) and lives (continued car dependence, emissions, traffic deaths). We need to push for urgency. Seamless Bay Area has warned that the current governance structure (two agencies with equal power) is "an unstable arrangement likely to contribute to years of delay."

Link21 needs public support to stay on track and on schedule. Here's how you can help.

Current estimates: $18-30 billion for the crossing itself (2023 dollars), plus $15-25 billion for network connections - potentially $33-55 billion total. Yes, that's enormous. But consider: the Bay Area GDP is over $1 trillion annually. London's Crossrail cost $23 billion and now carries 700,000 daily passengers while generating billions in economic value. Federal funding through the Corridor ID Program and FTA New Starts could cover a significant share. Over 50+ years of service, the economic returns dwarf the investment.

The target for delivering benefits is 2040. The project is currently in the Project Selection Phase, defining stations and alignments before launching formal environmental review. There is no specific construction start date yet - that depends on completing the EIR/EIS and securing funding. But every year of delay increases costs (construction inflation) and prolongs our vulnerability with a single crossing. Public pressure for urgency matters.

Several alignments are being studied. The crossing would connect Oakland and San Francisco, but the exact station locations and route through each city are still being determined. This is why your input during the environmental review matters - you can advocate for specific stations and connections.

No. The current tube was built 50 years ago and is already at capacity during peak hours. It's also a single point of failure - one disruption and there's no alternative. Every major world city with a water barrier has multiple crossings. We're overdue.

Decades of research prove that adding highway lanes doesn't reduce congestion (induced demand). Rail moves far more people per dollar invested and per unit of land. A single rail track moves the equivalent of 10-16 highway lanes. Rail is the future; highways are the past.

We track Link21 developments, community meetings, and political updates. Follow along.