Transportation Improvement Program

Federally funded transportation improvements for the region

The Twin Cities Transportation Improvement Program (TIP) describes all proposed federally-funded transportation projects within the metropolitan planning area, including highway, transit, bike and pedestrian improvements. The program is pulled together yearly and spans a four-year period.

The Met Council, as the Metropolitan Planning Organization, is federally required to prepare the TIP as a short-range program that complements its long-range transportation plan. The estimated project costs described in the program must not exceed anticipated revenues in any given fiscal year. The Met Council prepares the TIP in cooperation with the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) State Transportation Improvement Program.

2025-28 Transportation Improvement Program

The 2025-28 Transportation Improvement Program is a four-year program that includes highway, transit, bicycle, and pedestrian projects in the Minneapolis-St. Paul urbanized planning area, including the seven-county metro area. Explore these projects on the new Transportation Improvement Program interactive map. You can navigate by project category, county, or Metropolitan Planning Organization area.
 

These are federal- and state-funded projects that will:

  • Build better roads that improve safety and include all forms of transportation
  • Invest in transit to create a stronger system that supports our growing region and better serves everyone
  • Create community connections by developing and improving bikeways and walkways

Read the 2025-28 Transportation Improvement Program (PDF)

Read the 2025-28 Transportation Improvement Program Public Comment Report (PDF)

Program components and process

The TIP must include all federal funds proposed to be spent in the urbanized area. This includes funds granted through the Regional Solicitation process; federal funds programmed by MnDOT for the Metro District; federal transit funds programmed by the Met Council and transit providers; and federal funds programmed for the urbanized portions of Wright and Sherburne Counties and the town of Houlton, Wisconsin.

The program must be consistent with and implement the region’s Transportation Policy Plan and meet the State Implementation Plan for air quality. The TIP and its amendments are reviewed and recommended by the Transportation Advisory Board (TAB) and its technical advisory committee, and approved by the Met Council.