The Rockford Intercity Passenger Rail is a proposed Metra inter-city rail service between Chicago and Rockford, Illinois. The project is being led by the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) funded with $275 million through the Rebuild Illinois capital plan. The route is expected to begin by 2027, reinstating rail service to Rockford for the first time in over 40 years after the discontinuation of Amtrak's Black Hawk in 1981.
The service will operate without stops along the Milwaukee District West Line between Chicago Union Station and Elgin, with a stop at one of the three existing Metra stations. The route will continue west beyond Big Timber Road station on a new connection to the Union Pacific Railroad's Belvidere Subdivision. The service will have an intermediate stop in Belvidere before terminating in downtown Rockford.
The route has yet to receive an official name, with Metra interested in branding the service to distinguish it from its existing commuter rail network.
In a late 2025 update, the project administrators confirmed the necessary construction/track upgrades were slated to begin in Spring 2026, with passenger service still set for 2027.
The route will service five stations at two existing and three new facilities. Existing stations will be located at Chicago Union Station, the line's east terminal, and at an existing station in Elgin, either National Street, downtown Elgin, or Big Timber Road. Station locations and designs in Huntley, Belvidere, and Rockford need to be determined, with preliminary plans expected by November 1, 2023. The station at Chicago Street in downtown Elgin is presented as the preferred choice, offering a connection to Pace's Elgin Transportation Center. The village of Huntley withdrew its support of the project in October 2025. The city of Marengo has proposed that the station be opened there instead.
Fares are yet to be determined, and are expected to be structured differently than existing commuter rail fares. IDOT and Metra are working together to determine appropriate pricing. One reason Metra was selected as an operator over Amtrak was existing fare integration with other Chicago area transit authorities.