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California’s Infrastructure Report Card 2025: Challenges and Opportunities

On December 3, 2025, ASCE Region 9, which encompasses the state of California released the 2025 Report Card for California’s Infrastructure, giving the state an overall grade of C-, consistent with the grade it received in 2019. California is home to nearly 40 million residents, a global economy, and some of the nation’s most complex infrastructure systems, supporting bustling ports, advanced water systems, world-leading transit networks, and communities stretching from dense urban centers to wildfire-prone rural regions.

So, what does a C- mean? California’s infrastructure is holding up, thanks in part to major federal and state investments, but aging assets, climate pressures, and rapid growth are pushing many systems to their limits. Wildfires, drought, storms, earthquakes, and rising sea levels continue to test an already overstretched network.

A Few Categories Are Moving in the Right Direction

Some infrastructure sectors have seen meaningful progress since the last report card:

These improvements show what’s possible when sustained investment, innovative policy, and cross-agency collaboration align.

But Other Sectors Are Falling Behind

For many categories, progress has stalled or even declined:

Many of these systems face growing climate risks, and without long-term funding, modernization may not keep pace with economic needs or population growth.

Why It Matters

California leads the nation in economic productivity, innovation, clean energy, and global trade. But that leadership depends on reliable roads and bridges, resilient water systems, safe and up-to-date schools, modernized ports, and strong energy infrastructure.

Between 2020 and 2024, California experienced eight billion-dollar disasters, resulting in $20-$50 billion in costs. These disasters illustrate the high cost of deferred investment and the urgent need for resilient design. Infrastructure resilience isn’t just a policy priority—it is a public safety imperative.

What Needs to Happen

ASCE’s recommendations for California focus on four big moves:

The Path Ahead

California has world-class engineers, innovative public agencies, and a long track record of tackling big challenges. But today’s C- shows that the state’s infrastructure is not yet keeping pace with its ambitions or its risks.

With continued investment, forward-looking planning, and a commitment to resilience, California can build an infrastructure system that meets the moment—and the future.

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