Key Stats
- Market Capitalization: $133 billion (November 2025)
- Annual Revenue: $24.25 billion (2024)
- Employees: 29,700+ worldwide
- Track Network: 32,200+ miles across 23 states
- Founded: July 1, 1862 in Omaha, Nebraska
Union Pacific Corporation stands as the largest public railroad company in North America. The company operates through its subsidiary, Union Pacific Railroad, providing freight transportation services across the western two-thirds of the United States.
Union Pacific serves all major West Coast and Gulf Coast ports with connections to eastern gateways. The railroad links with Canada’s rail systems and remains the only carrier serving all six major Mexico gateways. The company transports agricultural products, automotive goods, chemicals, coal, industrial products, and intermodal freight.
Headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska, Union Pacific has maintained operations from this location since its founding. The company traces its origins to President Abraham Lincoln’s signing of the Pacific Railway Act in 1862.
Union Pacific History
President Abraham Lincoln signed the Pacific Railway Act, creating Union Pacific Railroad. Congress authorized construction of a railroad from the Missouri River to the Pacific as a Civil War measure to preserve the Union.
Construction began in earnest as the first Union Pacific rail was laid in Omaha, Nebraska. Workers, primarily Irish immigrants, drove the railroad westward toward Utah.
The Golden Spike ceremony at Promontory Summit, Utah joined Union Pacific with Central Pacific Railroad on May 10. This created the first transcontinental railroad in North America, connecting Council Bluffs, Iowa to Sacramento, California.
The Crédit Mobilier scandal exposed fraudulent overbilling of construction costs and congressional bribes. The controversy damaged the company’s reputation but did not lead to bankruptcy during the financial crisis of 1873.
Union Pacific Railroad was reorganized as Union Pacific Railway under railroad magnate Jay Gould. The new company consolidated with Kansas Pacific Railway and Denver Pacific Railway.
The company declared bankruptcy during the Panic of 1893 and entered government receivership. It emerged in 1897 under investment group Kuhn, Loeb & Co., controlled by E.H. Harriman, reverting to the original Union Pacific Railroad name.
Union Pacific acquired a 46% stake in Southern Pacific Railroad. The U.S. Supreme Court forced divestiture in 1913 due to antitrust concerns.
Union Pacific founded the Sun Valley resort in Idaho. The company’s engineering department in Omaha designed the first ski chairlift that summer.
Union Pacific Corporation was established in Utah as a holding company for Union Pacific Railroad and other subsidiaries. Corporate headquarters were located in New York City at the time.
Union Pacific Corporation acquired Missouri Pacific Railroad, Western Pacific Railroad, and Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad. These mergers significantly expanded the rail network across the western United States.
Union Pacific merged with Chicago and North Western Transportation Company, completing its reach into the Upper Midwest.
Union Pacific acquired Southern Pacific Rail Corporation for $5.4 billion, finally completing a merger envisioned nearly a century earlier. This created the largest railroad in the United States at the time.
Union Pacific announced an $85 billion agreement to acquire Norfolk Southern Corporation. If approved, this would create America’s first transcontinental freight railroad spanning 50,000+ miles across 43 states.
Union Pacific Co-founders
Abraham Lincoln
The 16th President signed the Pacific Railway Act of 1862, creating Union Pacific and authorizing the first transcontinental railroad as a measure to preserve the Union during the Civil War.
Thomas C. Durant
Vice President and General Manager who drove the railroad’s construction. He lobbied Congress, secured financing, and oversaw track-laying operations. The city of Durant, Iowa bears his name.
Oakes Ames
Key financier who invested over $1 million of personal funds and raised additional capital during a critical money crunch in 1865. Lincoln called him the “broad shouldered Ames.”
Oliver Ames
Brother of Oakes Ames who partnered in financing construction. Together, the Ames brothers placed all resources of their Oliver Ames & Sons business at the railroad’s disposal.
Grenville Dodge
Civil War general who served as Chief Engineer. No individual was more important to Union Pacific’s construction and western railroading. He influenced the railroad’s destiny for 30 years.
Samuel B. Reed
Engineer of Construction and Superintendent of Operations who supervised all grading, bridging, tunneling, and track laying during the transcontinental railroad’s construction.
Union Pacific Revenue
Union Pacific Corporation generated $24.25 billion in revenue during fiscal year 2024, representing a modest increase from the prior year. The company’s diversified freight mix includes agricultural products, automotive goods, chemicals, coal, industrial products, and intermodal containers.
Revenue peaked at $24.88 billion in 2022 before declining slightly in 2023. The company has demonstrated resilience through economic cycles, maintaining stable income streams from its essential transportation services.
Union Pacific Annual Revenue (2015-2024)
Union Pacific Acquisitions
Union Pacific Corporation has grown through strategic acquisitions spanning more than a century. The most transformative deal came in 1996 when Union Pacific acquired Southern Pacific Rail Corporation for $5.4 billion. This merger united two historic railroads that had competed since the 1869 Golden Spike ceremony.
The Southern Pacific acquisition included the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad, St. Louis Southwestern Railway, and SPCSL Corporation. Integration challenges caused temporary service disruptions, particularly in Houston during 1997 and 1998, but the combined network ultimately strengthened Union Pacific’s competitive position.
Earlier acquisitions in 1982 brought Missouri Pacific Railroad, Western Pacific Railroad, and Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad into the Union Pacific system. The 1995 merger with Chicago and North Western Transportation Company extended the network into the Upper Midwest, connecting Chicago to the western rail network.
In July 2025, Union Pacific announced plans to acquire Norfolk Southern Corporation for $85 billion in cash and stock. This pending transaction would create the first single-company transcontinental freight railroad in the United States. The combined network would span over 50,000 miles across 43 states and connect approximately 100 ports. The merger requires approval from the Surface Transportation Board, with the companies planning to file their application by January 2026. Norfolk Southern shareholders would receive one share of Union Pacific stock and $88.82 in cash for each Norfolk Southern share.
Union Pacific Marketcap
Union Pacific Corporation maintains a market capitalization of approximately $133 billion as of November 2025. This positions the company among the 140 most valuable publicly traded companies worldwide. The railroad trades on the New York Stock Exchange under ticker symbol UNP.
Market capitalization has fluctuated with economic conditions and investor sentiment toward the transportation sector. The company reached peak valuations during periods of strong freight demand and operational efficiency improvements.
Union Pacific Market Capitalization (2015-2025)
Union Pacific Competitors
Union Pacific operates in a consolidated railroad industry where a handful of Class I carriers dominate freight transportation. The company shares a duopoly with BNSF Railway on transcontinental freight rail lines across the western, midwestern, and southern United States.
Competition extends beyond traditional railroads to include trucking companies and intermodal logistics providers. The United Parcel Service and FedEx compete for time-sensitive freight shipments through their ground and air networks.
| Company | Headquarters | Type | Network Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| BNSF Railway | Fort Worth, TX | Class I Railroad | Western United States |
| Norfolk Southern | Atlanta, GA | Class I Railroad | Eastern United States |
| CSX Corporation | Jacksonville, FL | Class I Railroad | Eastern United States |
| Canadian National | Montreal, Canada | Class I Railroad | Canada and Central U.S. |
| Canadian Pacific Kansas City | Calgary, Canada | Class I Railroad | Canada, U.S., Mexico |
| J.B. Hunt Transport | Lowell, AR | Intermodal/Trucking | North America |
| XPO Logistics | Greenwich, CT | Freight Transportation | North America, Europe |
| C.H. Robinson | Eden Prairie, MN | Logistics Platform | Global |
| Schneider National | Green Bay, WI | Trucking/Intermodal | North America |
| Landstar System | Jacksonville, FL | Transportation Services | North America |
The railroad industry consolidation trend continues with Union Pacific’s pending acquisition of Norfolk Southern. Similar to how Boeing dominates aerospace manufacturing and Ford Motor Company shaped American automotive history, Union Pacific has played a foundational role in building America’s transportation infrastructure. The company connects manufacturers to markets much like Amazon connects consumers to products through its logistics network.
FAQs
When was Union Pacific founded?
Union Pacific Railroad was incorporated on July 1, 1862 when President Abraham Lincoln signed the Pacific Railway Act. The act authorized construction of the first transcontinental railroad.
Who owns Union Pacific Corporation?
Union Pacific Corporation is a publicly traded company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under ticker symbol UNP. Institutional investors including Vanguard and BlackRock hold significant ownership stakes.
How many miles of track does Union Pacific operate?
Union Pacific Railroad operates over 32,200 miles of track across 23 states in the western two-thirds of the United States. The network connects all major West Coast and Gulf Coast ports.
What is Union Pacific’s largest acquisition?
The pending $85 billion acquisition of Norfolk Southern represents Union Pacific’s largest deal. The 1996 purchase of Southern Pacific Rail Corporation for $5.4 billion was previously the company’s biggest acquisition.
Where is Union Pacific headquartered?
Union Pacific Corporation is headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska at the Union Pacific Center. The railroad has maintained operations from Omaha since its founding in 1862.