More
reliable
frequent
accessible
resilient
sustainable
innovative
connected

Hop onScroll Down

The future rides with us


The 20-Year Needs Assessment is a broad, comprehensive blueprint that outlines the MTA region's transportation capital needs for the next generation. It provides an extensive, long-term view based upon rigorous data analysis across all the MTA agencies. It's also an opportunity to look beyond today's constraints to envision the possible future of the system if the right investments are made.

A pivotal moment

Over the past century, New York's transit network has successfully powered the region into global prominence. Today, a series of existential forces are converging—including aging infrastructure in need of ongoing repair—making this a pivotal moment for the MTA and the future of New York.

Over the next 20 years, we will be forced to confront three major challenges:

Aging infrastructure

A vast and aging transit network largely built more than a century ago could experience catastrophic breakdowns without intervention.

Learn more

Climate change

Climate change is imperiling infrastructure that was not designed to withstand extreme weather events.

Learn more

Changing rider needs

A profound societal transformation around travel, work, and what riders expect from a transit experience is underway. Our region is projected to grow by over 1 million residents and nearly 1 million jobs by 2045. We must be ready—or risk stifling a new generation of growth.

Learn more

If we ignore these threats ...

We risk the survival of the system itself—and New York with it.

Without more aggressive intervention, the deteriorating structural beams holding up the 110-year-old Train Shed at Grand Central Terminal—that supports Park Avenue and provides a roof for trains—is at risk of failure, suspending Metro-North service into Manhattan.

In 20 years, more than 75% of the New York City subway major power substation components will be more than half a century old, risking extended power outages across the system and potentially shutting down multiple lines.

As climate change accelerates and extreme weather events become more common, we risk asset failures and system shutdowns without targeted climate resilience protections.

We've been here before. Revisit our history.

If we face these challenges ...

In our vision of the future, we will bring riders back to transit and we will build for the future. We will accommodate our region's expected jobs and population growth of over 1 million in the next 20 years. In this vision, we will serve more than 8 million daily riders.

The MTA of the future will be ...

More frequent. We will deliver more frequent subway, bus, and commuter rail service.

More reliable. Customer journey time and on-time performance will exceed 90%.

More accessible. 95% of all commuter rail and subway stations will become accessible by 2045 and 2055, respectively.

More climate-ready. Greenhouse gas emissions will be reduced by 85% and vulnerable infrastructure will be protected against extreme weather.

Our choice

New York has demonstrated throughout its history that investment in transit is the key to unlocking economic growth for the region—and that failure to do so has dire consequences. Now it's our turn to confront upcoming challenges and secure the future for the next generation.

We've been here before ...

1900-1970s

After transit investments more than 100 years ago made modern New York possible, unleashing more than two generations of growth, by the 1970s the system had been allowed to fall into disrepair. As the transit system deteriorated, the city's population and economy plummeted with it, pushing New York to the brink of bankruptcy.

1980-2000s

In the 1980s, a historic investment reinvigorated the system—and New York's fortunes revived with it. More recently, we nearly repeated the cycle as disinvestment in the early 2000s brought us to the "Summer of Hell" in 2017 when, once again, our transit infrastructure began to break down.

Revisit our history

We are on the right track—but we're not done.

Gov. Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature made a historic investment in transit service as part of the 2023 New York state budget, recognizing the essential nature of transit service to millions of New York residents and businesses.

But operating the service is only half the picture—building and rebuilding stations, tunnels, signals, elevators, electric buses, rail yards, bus depots, and other infrastructure is also critical.

Our system is vast—and has a lot of needs

The recent $55 billion 2020-2024 Capital Program acknowledged the scale of the task ahead. But there is a lot of work still to be done.

The MTA is ready to meet this moment

The integration of all capital work under the MTA's Construction & Development (MTA C&D) agency is enabling projects to be delivered more effectively and quickly, beginning with the historic $55 billion 2020-2024 Capital Program. In 2022, MTA C&D completed $6.2 billion of work and initiated another $11.4 billion in new projects—delivering a historic level of investment into keeping our system in a state of good repair.

Explore how MTA C&D is delivering projects better, faster, and cheaper

The 20-Year Needs Assessment provides the path toward a resilient, reliable, and modern transit system that is safer and more efficient. These investments will unlock a new generation of prosperity for the region.
See how

Our goals

The 20-Year Needs Assessment is a broad, comprehensive blueprint that outlines the MTA region's transportation capital needs for the next generation. It provides an extensive, long-term view based upon rigorous data analysis across all the MTA agencies. It's also an opportunity to look beyond today's constraints to envision the possible future of the system if the right investments are made.

Rebuild our system so it will last another 100 years

  • Replace antiquated signals, switches, and interlockings—on subways and on commuter railroads—that contribute to lengthy delays and upgrade our power systems to meet our needs into the future.
  • Reconstruct the crumbling infrastructure that leads to Grand Central, avoiding catastrophic shutdown of Metro-North Railroad (Metro-North) service.
  • Continue to rebuild our 200-year-old Long Island Rail Road (LIRR), especially tunnels, to maintain Brooklyn service.
  • Use innovative technology like dehumidifying our bridge cables on the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge to extend its useful life.

A look at two possible tomorrows

Before and after slider

Use the slider to envision a system without proper investment (left) and with proper investment (right).

Explore a future with proper investment