Tag: Light Rail

  • What Sound Transit’s Everett Light Rail Uncertainty Means for Paine Field Aerospace Workers

    What Sound Transit’s Everett Light Rail Uncertainty Means for Paine Field Aerospace Workers



    Q: Will light rail reach Paine Field for Boeing and aerospace workers?
    A: The Paine Field station (officially SW Everett Industrial Center station) is included in all known Sound Transit scenarios for the Everett Link Extension. The question is whether the full line continues to Everett Station, or stops at or near Paine Field — and when. The Sound Transit Board is expected to decide in summer 2026.

    What Sound Transit’s Everett Light Rail Uncertainty Means for Paine Field Aerospace Workers

    If you work on Boeing’s flight line at Paine Field, assemble components for the 777X program, or work at any of the 600-plus aerospace suppliers in Snohomish County’s industrial corridor, you have a direct stake in the Sound Transit cost crisis that dominated the April 14 town hall at Everett Station. Here’s what the $1.1 billion cost overrun problem means for you specifically.

    The Paine Field Station: Your Stop in the Extension

    The planned SW Everett Industrial Center station — commonly called the Paine Field station — sits at the southern end of the Everett Link Extension’s northern segment, closest to Boeing’s widebody assembly facilities and Paine Field International Airport. This is the stop designed to serve the 30,000-plus workers commuting daily to the Paine Field industrial corridor.

    What makes the Paine Field station different from the others in the extension is that it anchors the economics of the whole project. The concentrated, shift-based workforce at Boeing and the aerospace suppliers creates exactly the kind of predictable, high-density ridership that makes transit investments pencil out. That’s why the Paine Field station is believed to be preserved in all scenarios Sound Transit is weighing — even the ones that stop short of Everett Station downtown.

    The Scenario That Could Actually Help Boeing Workers First

    Here’s the scenario that could actually benefit aerospace workers even while leaving downtown Everett disconnected: Sound Transit builds the extension to Paine Field first, in a phased approach, without completing the final segment to Everett Station. Under this scenario, workers commuting from Seattle, Bellevue, Lynnwood, and south King County would gain a direct light rail connection to the Paine Field corridor by approximately 2037 — potentially years before a full Everett Station connection would be complete in a more ambitious scenario.

    That’s a real tradeoff. Workers who commute from the south would benefit. Everett residents who want to ride light rail downtown would not. The politics of that tradeoff are complicated — and it’s exactly what the April 14 town hall crowd was pressing Sound Transit about.

    What the Commute Currently Looks Like

    Right now, getting to Paine Field from Seattle on transit means Link light rail to Lynnwood City Center station (opened 2024), followed by Community Transit Route 201 or 202 into the Paine Field corridor. The trip takes approximately 75-90 minutes from downtown Seattle. By car on I-5, the same trip takes 35-45 minutes in off-peak traffic — and significantly longer during Boeing’s shift changes, when northbound I-5 and SR 526 congest heavily.

    Direct light rail to Paine Field — with trains running every 8-12 minutes — would compress that commute to roughly 50-55 minutes from downtown Seattle, with no traffic variability and no car costs. For workers doing daily reverse commutes from Seattle, that’s a meaningful quality of life change. For workers already living in Everett or Marysville, it adds a transit option for commuting south to Seattle.

    The 2037 Target — And What Could Push It Later

    Sound Transit’s current projection puts the first phase of the Everett extension — reaching as far north as Paine Field — as early as 2037. That’s 11 years away. For Boeing workers early in their careers, that’s a plausible planning horizon. For workers counting on transit options in the near term, it’s not.

    What could push the 2037 target later: the Sound Transit Board choosing a more conservative phasing approach that delays construction start, federal funding gaps, continued inflation in construction costs, or permitting and right-of-way challenges in the SR 526 corridor. Sound Transit has already slipped this project’s timeline from 2036 to 2037-2041. That history suggests treating optimistic targets with skepticism.

    How to Influence the Summer 2026 Decision

    The Sound Transit Board will vote on ST3 System Plan restructuring in summer 2026. The voices of Paine Field workers — as both transit users and significant economic stakeholders — matter in this process. Snohomish County’s elected Sound Transit Board representatives represent your interests.

    Ways to engage before the vote: Submit comments at soundtransit.org, contact Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers’s office at (425) 388-3460, or reach out to the Economic Alliance Snohomish County, which has been advocating loudly for the full Paine Field and Everett Station connection.

    For the complete picture on the Everett extension, see our full knowledge hub: Sound Transit’s Everett Link Extension: The Complete 2026 Guide. For more on Everett’s aerospace economy, read about the 600+ aerospace companies in Snohomish County and Boeing’s North Line worker guide.

    FAQ: Light Rail and Paine Field for Boeing Workers

    Will the Paine Field station be built regardless of what happens to Everett Station?

    Based on publicly available Sound Transit scenario documents, the Paine Field station is included in all known options. The key question is whether the line extends further to Everett Station, not whether Paine Field gets served. No final decision has been made.

    When would a Paine Field light rail station open?

    Sound Transit targets the first phase reaching Paine Field as early as 2037, pending the Board’s summer 2026 decisions on ST3 System Plan restructuring.

    How long would the light rail commute from Seattle to Paine Field be?

    With a direct Link connection from downtown Seattle to the Paine Field station, travel time is estimated at approximately 50-55 minutes — compared to 75-90 minutes on current bus-rail connections and 35-60 minutes by car depending on traffic.

    What does the Paine Field light rail station cover?

    The SW Everett Industrial Center station is planned to serve Boeing’s widebody assembly facilities, Paine Field International Airport (PAE), and the Paine Field industrial corridor — home to Boeing and 600+ aerospace suppliers.

    How can Boeing workers comment on Sound Transit’s decision?

    Submit comments at soundtransit.org, attend Sound Transit Board meetings with public comment periods, or contact Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers’s office. The Board votes on the ST3 System Plan in summer 2026.

  • Moving to Everett? Here’s What Sound Transit’s Light Rail Uncertainty Means for You

    Moving to Everett? Here’s What Sound Transit’s Light Rail Uncertainty Means for You



    Q: Can I ride light rail from Everett to Seattle?
    A: Not yet from Everett itself — but you can already connect. Lynnwood Link opened in 2024, with trains running to Lynnwood City Center station. Community Transit buses connect Everett to Lynnwood for the light rail transfer. Direct light rail to Everett Station is projected for 2037-2041, depending on Sound Transit’s summer 2026 decisions.

    Moving to Everett? Here’s What Sound Transit’s Light Rail Uncertainty Means for You

    One of the most common questions from people considering a move to Everett is the commute question: can I realistically get to Seattle without a car? The answer in 2026 is: yes, with transfers — and possibly via direct light rail by 2037 to 2041, depending on a critical Sound Transit Board vote coming this summer.

    Here’s the honest picture for people who are choosing a home in Everett with one eye on future transit.

    What Exists Right Now: The Lynnwood Transfer

    Lynnwood Link light rail opened in 2024, extending Seattle’s Link light rail network to Lynnwood City Center station — about 15 miles south of downtown Everett. From Everett, Community Transit’s Swift Blue Line BRT and express bus routes connect to Lynnwood City Center in 20-35 minutes, depending on your Everett starting point.

    From Lynnwood, Link light rail carries you to the University of Washington in about 22 minutes and to downtown Seattle (Westlake Station) in about 35 minutes. Total Everett-to-Seattle time via transit: approximately 65-80 minutes, depending on connections. By car, the same trip takes 30-45 minutes off-peak and can exceed 90 minutes during peak hours — with the added cost of parking, which in downtown Seattle often runs $25-40 per day or $300-400 per month.

    The Promise: Direct Light Rail to Everett Station

    The Everett Link Extension — voted for by Puget Sound residents in 2016 — would add six stations connecting Lynnwood Link north through Mariner, Paine Field, and ultimately to Everett Station in downtown Everett. When complete, a rider at Everett Station would be able to board light rail directly and reach downtown Seattle in roughly 55-65 minutes, with no transfers.

    That direct connection would meaningfully change what it means to live in Everett and work in Seattle — or work at Boeing’s Paine Field campus and live in Seattle. It’s the kind of transit investment that anchors long-term real estate value and livability.

    The 2026 Crisis: Costs Have Climbed Sharply

    As of spring 2026, Sound Transit faces costs for the Everett extension that have climbed between $200 million and $1.1 billion above the original $6.6 billion estimate — putting the total at potentially $7.7 billion. The agency has described a $34.5 billion system-wide budget gap driven by inflation, tariffs on construction materials, labor shortages, and rising right-of-way costs.

    The Sound Transit Board is weighing at least three scenarios for restructuring the ST3 System Plan, with a decision expected in summer 2026. One scenario would not complete the connection to Everett Station — instead stopping the extension at or near Paine Field. That outcome would leave Everett Station without direct light rail for years beyond current projections.

    What This Means If You’re Choosing a Neighborhood Now

    If you’re buying a home or signing a lease in Everett in 2026, here’s the practical reality to factor in:

    Near Everett Station (Broadway, Bayside, downtown core): These neighborhoods benefit most from a completed light rail extension to Everett Station — and face the most disappointment if that scenario is deferred. Right now, Community Transit’s express bus connections to Lynnwood are your best transit option. The downtown core has walkable services and Everett Station’s existing Amtrak Cascades and Sounder connections.

    Near Paine Field / Casino Road / SW Everett: The Paine Field station appears to be preserved in all Sound Transit scenarios, meaning transit access to the SW industrial corridor may arrive on a relatively consistent 2037 timeline regardless of what happens to Everett Station.

    Neighborhoods near I-5 (Everett Way, Beverly/Bayside): Good access to express buses running south along the corridor to Lynnwood Link. Current transit commute times to Seattle via Lynnwood transfer are manageable for daily commuters.

    Comparing Everett to Alternatives

    For context: moving to Everett in 2026 puts you approximately 30-35 miles north of Seattle. Comparable Seattle-area transit commutes: Tacoma to Seattle (55 miles) via Sounder takes 63 minutes; Bellevue to Seattle (10 miles) via Link takes 22 minutes; Redmond to Seattle (15 miles) via Link takes 30 minutes. Everett’s Lynnwood transfer option compares favorably to Tacoma’s commute and unfavorably to Eastside options.

    Everett’s median home price of approximately $530,000 (2026) versus Seattle’s $850,000-plus median makes the commute tradeoff financially significant for many buyers.

    For more context on Everett neighborhoods, see our coverage of Casino Road’s South Everett community, the complete Sound Transit Extension guide, and Lowell, Everett’s oldest neighborhood.

    FAQ: Light Rail and Moving to Everett

    Is there light rail in Everett right now?

    No direct light rail in Everett yet. Lynnwood Link, which opened in 2024, extends to Lynnwood City Center station about 15 miles south. Community Transit buses connect Everett to Lynnwood for the transfer to Link.

    When will light rail reach Everett Station?

    Sound Transit currently estimates 2037-2041, subject to the Board’s summer 2026 decisions. One scenario under consideration would not complete the Everett Station connection.

    How long does the commute from Everett to Seattle take on transit?

    Currently, approximately 65-80 minutes via Community Transit to Lynnwood Link, then Link to downtown Seattle. By car in off-peak traffic, 30-45 minutes; peak hours can exceed 90 minutes on I-5.

    Will property values near Everett Station increase if light rail is built?

    Light rail stations consistently increase property values in surrounding areas. Studies of completed Link stations show 10-25% value premiums within a quarter mile of stations over a 5-10 year period. Everett Station-area properties have partially priced in the anticipated extension — the unresolved timeline creates some pricing uncertainty.

    What Community Transit routes connect Everett to Lynnwood Link?

    Community Transit Swift Blue Line BRT and express routes 113, 201, and 202 connect Everett to Lynnwood City Center station. Check commute options at commutransit.org.

  • Sound Transit Faces Up to $1.1B in Added Costs for Everett Light Rail — What Happened at Tuesday’s Town Hall

    Sound Transit Faces Up to $1.1B in Added Costs for Everett Light Rail — What Happened at Tuesday’s Town Hall

    What is the Everett Link Extension? The Everett Link Extension is a planned 16-mile light rail line connecting Snohomish County communities — including Lynnwood, Mariner, Paine Field, and Everett Station — to the regional Sound Transit light rail network. It was included in the ST3 ballot measure approved by Puget Sound voters in 2016, with an original 2021 cost estimate of $6.6 billion.

    On the evening of April 14, a standing-room-only crowd packed Everett Station to hear Sound Transit explain what is happening with the light rail extension their communities voted for — and to press officials on whether it will be built on anything close to the original terms.

    The short answer: Sound Transit faces costs that have climbed between $200 million and $1.1 billion above the original 2021 estimate for the Everett extension alone, as part of a system-wide budget challenge the agency describes as a $34.5 billion gap. The timeline has already slipped. And one of the scenarios the agency is weighing would not complete the connection to Everett at all.

    Why Costs Have Climbed

    Sound Transit attributes the cost increases to a combination of forces that have hit infrastructure projects broadly in recent years: inflation, tariffs on construction materials, labor shortages, supply chain disruptions, and escalating right-of-way acquisition costs. Together, these factors have driven costs up 20 to 25 percent above what the agency’s 2021 financial plan assumed.

    For the Everett Link Extension specifically, the increase ranges from $200 million on the low end to $1.1 billion on the high end — on top of the original $6.6 billion estimate. That would put the project’s total cost at up to approximately $7.7 billion, depending on which scenario the Sound Transit Board pursues.

    The Timeline Has Already Slipped — Significantly

    When Snohomish County voters approved ST3 in 2016, the Everett Link Extension was projected to open in 2036. That target has already moved. Sound Transit now says the first phase — reaching as far north as Paine Field — may open by 2037, with the full extension to Everett Station potentially not arriving until somewhere between 2037 and 2041.

    A five-year window of uncertainty for a project’s completion date is itself a signal of how unsettled this extension’s future is. For residents who counted on light rail as a long-term alternative to the I-5 and Highway 2 commute into King County, that uncertainty is not abstract.

    Three Scenarios — Including One That Stops Short of Everett

    The most consequential piece of information for Everett residents at Tuesday’s town hall: Sound Transit is weighing three different approaches to closing its budget gap, and at least one of those scenarios would not complete the connection to Everett Station.

    The agency has not publicly labeled all three options by name, but previous Sound Transit documents have described approaches ranging from phasing the extension to terminate before reaching downtown Everett, to pursuing new financing mechanisms, to restructuring which ST3 projects get built first and on what timeline.

    For a city that anchored a significant portion of its long-term transit vision around being the northern terminus of Puget Sound light rail, the prospect of a scenario that bypasses Everett Station drew pointed and sustained questions from the crowd.

    Mayor Franklin and County Executive Somers Were in the Room

    Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers and Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin attended the April 14 town hall and were available to take questions alongside Sound Transit staff. Both officials have consistently advocated for the full Everett extension as a critical piece of the region’s transportation and economic development future.

    The day before the town hall, the Everett Herald’s editorial board published a call for Sound Transit to “exhaust every option to keep light rail on track” — a signal of the urgency local leaders and media are placing on this decision.

    What Happens Next

    Sound Transit’s board is expected to evaluate updated approaches to the ST3 System Plan in summer 2026. That decision will determine whether the Everett Link Extension proceeds on a modified but still-complete schedule, gets phased to stop short of Everett Station, or faces some other restructuring.

    Residents who want to weigh in before that decision can:

    • Attend Sound Transit Board meetings, which are open to public comment
    • Submit written comments through soundtransit.org
    • Contact Snohomish County’s elected Sound Transit Board representatives directly
    • Reach out to Mayor Franklin’s office or the Snohomish County Executive’s office

    What This Means for Everyday Commuters

    Light rail was a central promise of the ST3 campaign: a reliable, car-free connection linking Everett to Seattle and the broader regional network. Lynnwood Link opened in 2024, giving riders a northern terminus — with buses bridging the gap into Snohomish County. That arrangement was always intended to be temporary, until the Everett extension was complete.

    If the extension is scaled back or further delayed, Everett-area commuters would remain dependent on transfers and bus connections for years — or decades — beyond what voters were told in 2016. For a region that has some of the country’s most congested commutes, the stakes of this summer’s board decision are substantial.

    Frequently Asked Questions About the Everett Link Extension

    When will the Everett Link Extension open?

    Sound Transit currently projects the first phase to Paine Field opening by 2037, with the full extension to Everett Station arriving between 2037 and 2041. Both timelines are subject to further change pending the board’s summer 2026 decisions.

    How much will the Everett Link Extension cost?

    The original 2021 estimate was $6.6 billion. Costs have increased between $200 million and $1.1 billion above that figure, meaning the project could cost as much as approximately $7.7 billion depending on the scenario Sound Transit pursues.

    Could the light rail extension stop short of Everett?

    Yes, this is one of at least three scenarios Sound Transit is considering to address its $34.5 billion system-wide budget gap. No final decision has been made — the board is expected to act in summer 2026.

    When will Sound Transit decide on the Everett extension’s future?

    The Sound Transit Board is expected to take up ST3 System Plan updates in summer 2026.

    Who attended the April 14 Everett transit town hall?

    Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin, and Sound Transit representatives attended and took questions from a standing-room-only crowd at Everett Station.

    What is ST3?

    ST3 is the third Sound Transit ballot measure, approved by voters in the greater Puget Sound region in November 2016. It authorized funding for multiple light rail expansions, including the Everett Link Extension connecting Snohomish County to the regional network.

    How can Everett residents give input on the Everett Link Extension?

    Residents can attend Sound Transit Board meetings, submit comments at soundtransit.org, or contact their elected Sound Transit Board representatives and local officials including Mayor Franklin’s office or Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers’ office.


    → For the complete knowledge hub on the Everett Link Extension, see: Sound Transit’s Everett Link Extension: The Complete 2026 Guide to Light Rail’s Uncertain Future

  • Sound Transit Everett Link Extension: Where the Project Stands in 2026

    Sound Transit Everett Link Extension: Where the Project Stands in 2026

    If you live in Snohomish County and have ever wondered when light rail will actually reach Everett, 2026 is the year to pay attention. Sound Transit’s Everett Link Extension — the 16-mile, six-station project that would connect Snohomish County to the regional rail network — is entering one of its most consequential planning phases. A Draft Environmental Impact Statement is expected in 2026, preferred station alternatives are being confirmed, and the timeline for a Paine Field-area opening sits at 2037. Here’s what you need to know about where the project stands and what the next few years look like.

    What Is the Everett Link Extension?

    The Everett Link Extension is a planned addition to Sound Transit’s Link light rail network that would extend service from the Lynnwood City Center Station — opened in 2024 — northward through Mountlake Terrace, Lynnwood, Ash Way, Mariner, Paine Field, and ultimately to Everett Station downtown. The project would add 16 miles of track and six new stations, completing what Sound Transit calls “the spine” of the regional rail system.

    The project is being planned in two phases. The first phase would reach the southwest Everett industrial area near Paine Field — home to Boeing’s manufacturing operations — with a target opening date of 2037. The second phase would extend all the way to Everett Station, with a projected opening of 2041.

    For Snohomish County commuters, the Everett Link Extension represents the difference between driving to park-and-ride lots and being able to step onto light rail from neighborhoods closer to home — and from there, reach Seattle, the airport, and the broader regional network without a car.

    Where Things Stand in 2026: The Draft EIS

    Sound Transit is currently in the environmental review phase for the Everett Link Extension. That means preparing an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) — a detailed analysis of how each potential alignment and station configuration would affect the surrounding community, neighborhoods, businesses, and environment.

    The Draft EIS is expected to be published in 2026 and will be available for public review and comment for a minimum of 45 days. Once published, it’s a major milestone: the document represents Sound Transit’s formal analysis of the project’s impacts and lays out the trade-offs between different alignment and station options.

    The EIS is being prepared under both the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), with the Federal Transit Administration as the lead federal agency, and the Washington State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA), with Sound Transit as the state lead agency.

    Following the Draft EIS comment period, Sound Transit expects to identify, confirm, or modify its Preferred Alternative in summer 2026. A Final EIS and Record of Decision are then projected for summer 2027.

    What Are the Station Alternatives?

    The Everett Link Extension has multiple station locations where Sound Transit has been evaluating different alignment and placement options. Some have already received preliminary preferred designations based on community input and technical analysis during the scoping process (SEPA scoping completed 2023; NEPA scoping completed August 2025).

    At the West Alderwood station, alternatives are labeled B, D, and F — with Alternative D as the current preferred alternative. At the Southwest Everett Industrial Center station, alternatives A, B, and C are on the table, with Alternative A preferred. For the I-5/Broadway alignment segment, the two options are BI-1 and BI-2, with BI-1 as the current preferred alignment.

    These preferences are not final — they’re starting points for the Draft EIS analysis, and public comment can still shift the outcome. If you have a view on where stations should go or how alignments should route through neighborhoods you know, the Draft EIS public comment period in 2026 is your formal opportunity to put that feedback on record.

    The Boeing and Paine Field Factor

    One reason the Everett Link Extension has outsized importance for Snohomish County is its planned connection to the Paine Field area, where Boeing’s commercial airplane manufacturing facilities employ tens of thousands of workers across multiple shifts. A light rail connection to that employment center would represent one of the most significant transit investments in the region’s industrial corridor.

    For workers commuting from south Snohomish County, south King County, and Seattle, a Paine Field station could eventually eliminate the need to drive Highway 99 or I-5 to reach one of the region’s largest single employment sites. That potential has made the Paine Field alignment a consistent priority in regional planning conversations.

    The 2037 Paine Field-area opening date — assuming the project stays on schedule — would arrive roughly a decade after Lynnwood Link opened in 2024. A lot can change in that window, including costs, federal funding priorities, and regional growth patterns. Everett residents watching this project would be wise to stay engaged through Sound Transit’s public process rather than assuming the timeline is settled.

    Cost Pressures and the “Savings” Conversation

    The Everett Link Extension doesn’t exist in a budget vacuum. In September 2025, HeraldNet reported that Sound Transit was actively weighing possible savings options on the project as costs climbed. This is consistent with a broader pattern across Sound Transit’s expansion portfolio — projects authorized under the Sound Transit 3 ballot measure in 2016 have faced cost escalations, construction inflation, and schedule pressures that have forced the agency to make difficult trade-off decisions.

    What “savings options” means in practice can range from value engineering on station designs and materials to reconsidering alignment options that are less expensive to build but potentially less convenient for riders. The Draft EIS process will likely surface these trade-offs explicitly, making 2026 a critical period for community voices to weigh in before decisions get locked in.

    Snohomish County has its own Light Rail Communities program, housed at snohomishcountywa.gov, which provides residents with updates on how the county is engaging with Sound Transit’s planning process at the local level.

    How to Stay Involved

    For Everett and Snohomish County residents who want to track — or actively participate in — the Everett Link Extension planning process, here are the key resources and action points for 2026.

    • Watch for the Draft EIS release: Sound Transit will announce the public comment period at soundtransit.org/system-expansion/everett-link-extension. Sign up for project news updates on that page to get notified when the Draft EIS drops.
    • Attend public meetings: Sound Transit holds public hearings during comment periods. Check the project’s news and updates page for meeting schedules in your area.
    • Explore station design concepts: The project’s public engagement site at everettlink.participate.online has conceptual station design options for review and comment.
    • Track Snohomish County’s engagement: The county’s Light Rail Communities program at snohomishcountywa.gov/4068/Light-Rail-Communities provides local context and updates.
    • Key timeline dates to watch: Draft EIS publication (2026) → public comment period (minimum 45 days) → Preferred Alternative confirmation (summer 2026) → Final EIS (summer 2027) → Record of Decision (summer 2027).

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When will light rail reach Everett?

    Sound Transit currently projects the first phase of the Everett Link Extension — reaching the Paine Field area — to open by 2037. The full extension to Everett Station downtown is projected to open by 2041. These dates are based on current planning assumptions and may change.

    What is the Everett Link Extension Draft EIS?

    The Draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) is a detailed document analyzing the potential effects of different alignment and station options for the Everett Link Extension. It is expected to be published in 2026 and will be open for public comment for a minimum of 45 days. It is a required step under both federal (NEPA) and state (SEPA) environmental law.

    How many stations will the Everett Link Extension have?

    The Everett Link Extension is planned to include six new stations covering 16 miles of new light rail track, connecting from the Lynnwood City Center Station northward to Everett Station.

    Will light rail go to Boeing Paine Field?

    Yes. The planned alignment includes a station in the southwest Everett industrial area near Paine Field, which is home to Boeing’s commercial manufacturing facilities. The Paine Field-area station is part of Phase 1 of the extension, projected to open by 2037.

    How can I comment on the Everett Link Extension?

    When the Draft EIS is published in 2026, Sound Transit will open a formal public comment period. You can submit comments online, attend public hearings, and participate via the project’s engagement site at everettlink.participate.online. Signing up for project updates at soundtransit.org will notify you when the comment period opens.

    How much does the Everett Link Extension cost?

    Sound Transit has not published a final cost estimate for the Everett Link Extension as of April 2026, as the project is still in environmental review. Cost estimates will be refined as the preferred alignment and station design options are confirmed. The agency has been exploring cost reduction options as part of the planning process.

    Sources: Sound Transit Everett Link Extension project page (soundtransit.org); Sound Transit Everett Link Extension Project Factsheet (December 2024); Federal Register Notice of Intent to Prepare an EIS (July 29, 2025); HeraldNet “Sound Transit weighs possible savings on Everett Link extension” (September 25, 2025); Snohomish County Light Rail Communities program (snohomishcountywa.gov); everettlink.participate.online.