Recent news reports describe the dire state of investments in municipal bonds issued by the Florida private railroad company Brightline...
Read MoreBrightline Bonds: “Junk” Investment Misses Interest Payments
Recent news reports describe the dire state of investments in municipal bonds issued by the Florida private railroad company Brightline Trains. A January 16, 2026 article by Bloomberg, for instance, states that Brightline “skipped its second interest payment on $1.2 billion of subordinate municipal bonds” having skipped the first interest payment back in July 2026. The company also filed an amendment removing a requirement that it “make the interest payment in cash,” according to Bloomberg.
Brightline Trains has reportedly been facing “mounting financial woes as ridership and revenue fall far short of projections,” although it will not be considered to have defaulted until it misses its third consecutive interest payment. The second missed payment follows the December 2025 downgrading of Brightline bonds by the S&P Global Ratings. The S&P specifically downgraded Brightline’s senior municipal bonds “from BB-minus to CCC,” according to Vero News. In other words, the investments are considered junk bonds.
Underlying these developments are ridership and revenue figures that have fallen short of the company’s predictions, according to Bloomberg. “Ridership is running about 50% below the company’s estimate in a 2024 bond offering document,” the article states. “Brightline is examining its entire balance sheet and restructuring talks with bondholders are ongoing,” per the company’s former CEO, who was replaced in January.
More bad news came in February, when the Kroll Bond Rating Agency also downgraded Brightline bonds from BB to CCC+. “The downgrade reflects ongoing underperformance in ridership and revenues relative to KBRA’s rating case, as short- and long-distance demand through year-end 2025 remained below expectations despite the deployment of additional train cars and expanded capacity,” the agency explained in a news release. “This operating underperformance has led to continued draws on the project’s liquidity reserves, further weakening its financial position and increasing the risk of default as early as January 2027 under the rating case.”
Brightline Trains operates rail service in Southeast and Central Florida, offering passenger train service between cities including Miami, West Palm Beach, and Orlando. The company hopes to “replicate the model of Amtrak’s high-speed Acela service in the Northeast with better amenities,” according to Bloomberg, with service from Mmiami to Orlando taking three-and-a-half hours.
Carlson Law represents investors throughout the United States in claims against financial advisors and investment firms. If you or a loved one have suffered losses on investment bonds issued by Brightline Trains, please call us at 888-976-6111 or complete our contact form for a free and confidential consultation.

