Title: Transit Fare: Policy, Structure, and Technology
1Transit Fare Policy, Structure, and Technology
2Fare Changes
- Fare changes are often made in response to
particular issues and problems - 3 regularly scheduled, 97 as needed
3Farebox Recovery
4Fare Policy
- Economic concerns
- Ridership (Encourage mode shifts)
- Capture cost of services
- Revenue generation
- Reflect the value of service to user
- Meeting the needs of diverse market segments
- Political and equity concerns
- Helping the poor and disadvantaged
- Horizontal equity
- Redressing problems from under-priced auto use
5Fare Structures
- Flat Fares
- Distance-based Fares
- Zonal Fares
- Graduated pricing
- Time-based Fares
- Peak surcharge
- Off-peak discount
- Service-based Fares
- Express
- Bus-rail
- Free Fares
- Frequent-rider discounts
6Special Pricing
- University
- Employer Benefits
- Access-to-jobs
- Youth
- Senior
- Disabled
7Fare Structure Trends
- Simplification
- Flat by time of day
- Eliminate or Simplify zones/distance
- Eliminate transfers offer day passes ( 2.2
trips) - More variety of passes (weekly, daily)
8Free Fares
- Upside Ridership increase
- A significant share of gain from teenagers making
latent trips - Downside
- Revenue loss
- Poor schedule adherence
- Systemwide experiments (Trenton, Denver)
discontinued - Downtown only (Seattle, Portland, Syracuse, Salt
Lake City) - Assisted by other measures such as downtown
parking caps - Lesson
- Public resource whose consumers are identifiable
and which has economic value needs to be rationed
through price mechanisms, both to generate income
and prevent oversubscription(Cervero 1990)
9Time-based Differential
- US ridership more sensitive to off-peak discount
than peak surcharge - Differential had very modest impact in shifting
ridership from peak - Midday-discount induce latent trips
- Columbus, Ohio deep mid-day discount induce
sales tax revenues dedicated to transit system
that offset lost revenue.
10Context
- Under-priced Automobile Travel
11Examine Arguments for Differentiated Fares
- Higher operating cost for serving longer trip
- Peak-period and premium services more costly to
operate - Cost subsidization by users of shorter-distance,
off-peak or local services
12Complexity of Fare Structure
- Diversification of fare types and levels is not
huge hurdle for users - Well-designed differentiation may increase
revenue while promote equity objectives - Paying once for a whole trip!
13Fare Collection
- Barrier
- Pay on boarding
- Conductor-validated
- Self-service (honor)
14Experiments with Honor System
- Driver not responsible for checking fares
- Inspectors conduct random check
- Balancing
- Operating speed increase
- Equipment breaks/ fare evasion
15Types of Payment
- Real-time single-ride
- Prepaid
- multi-ride (transfers)
- period-pass (transfers expire)
- stored value (BART)
- Post-Payment (some shuttles, etc)
- Credit card billing is costly
16Fare Instruments
- Cash (bus, etc)
- Tokens (MTA Boston, NY)
- Paper (Amtrak, or bus transfers)
- Stored-Value card (BART)
- Smart Card
- ATM/Credit Card
- Transit Voucher
17Smart Cards
- Programmable to implement a variety of fare
policies, discounts, time of day, etc. - Expensive (costs 5/card)
- Multi-agency problems
- How to pay agencies for transfers, trips, etc.
- Bay Area Translink 23 years in the making!
18Smart Card Benefits
- Better OD, ridership, fare data
- Less cash to handle
- Lower printing costs
- Lower fare abuse
- Fewer fare disputes with operators
- Faster boarding (?)
- Can implement a variety of programs (welfare to
work, etc)