The study investigated the impact of the interaction between soybean and rhizobia on the assimilation apparatus functioning and biomass accumulation in different soybean lines with varying photoperiod sensitivity. Nearly isogenic lines (NILs) of soybean were used, with genes E1, E2, and E3 in different allelic states: Clark (e1E2E3), L80-5879 (E1e2e3), L63-3117 (e1e2E3), and L71-920 (e1e2e3). The experimental group for each line was treated with Bradyrhizobium japonicum 634b. Plants were grown under natural long-day conditions (16 hours). Growth indicators of the studied lines, such as relative growth rate (RGR), net assimilation rate (NAR), leaf area ratio (LAR), and specific leaf area (SLA), were analyzed, as well as the content of chlorophylls A and B in the V3 and V5 developmental stages. The results demonstrate that the influence of rhizobia on the functioning of the assimilation apparatus and biomass accumulation depends on the soybean line genotype. In the study, RGR, which characterizes the biomass accumulation rate, has similar trends to those observed with NAR, characterizing the assimilation apparatus's functioning. However, each line showed its own tendencies. For instance, in the short-day variety Clark, under bacterial influence, the value of RGR and NAR decreased. Additionally, LAR and SLA values indicated a reduction in the total photosynthetic surface area and leaf dry matter. Bacterial inoculation did not significantly affect the content of photosynthetic pigments in Clark leaves. Another short-day line, L80-5879, showed no significant impact of bacterial inoculation on biomass accumulation. However, soybean interaction with Bradyrhizobium japonicum 634b led to a decrease in leaf surface area and dry matter content. Probably, bacterial inoculation supported assimilation processes by increasing auxiliary chlorophyll b in photosystem I. A general trend of significant RGR reduction in neutral-day soybean lines, L63-3117 and L71-920, was identified under bacterial influence. The interaction with rhizobia differently affected LAR and SLA values, indicating distinct adaptive mechanisms to the interactions. In conditions of almost zero plant biomass accumulation, Bradyrhizobium japonicum 634b caused a decrease in the total photosynthetic surface area and chlorophyll a and b content in the L63-3117 line. In L71-920, bacterial inoculation had no effect on the total photosynthetic surface area, while leaf dry matter and photosynthetic pigment content decreased. The obtained results demonstrate that interaction with rhizobia can influence the functioning of the assimilation apparatus in soybeans with varying photoperiod sensitivity that is determined by genotype. It is important in improving soybean productivity and its application in agricultural practices.