Jump to content

NJ Transit Fare Increase


Recommended Posts

https://www.njtransit.com/hearing

Effective July 1st 2024

- One way ticket will expire in 30 days instead of forever

- Flexipass will be discontinued

- Annual 3% fare increase starting in 2025

 

Why are fares still not rounded to the near .25 is still beyond me. Requiring people to keep carrying dimes and nickel is ridiculous

Link to comment
Share on other sites


4 hours ago, Mtatransit said:

https://www.njtransit.com/hearing

Effective July 1st 2024

- One way ticket will expire in 30 days instead of forever

- Flexipass will be discontinued

- Annual 3% fare increase starting in 2025

 

Why are fares still not rounded to the near .25 is still beyond me. Requiring people to keep carrying dimes and nickel is ridiculous

They should be lowering the fares with the way they operate some of there lines...lol

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Mtatransit said:

https://www.njtransit.com/hearing

Effective July 1st 2024

- One way ticket will expire in 30 days instead of forever

- Flexipass will be discontinued

- Annual 3% fare increase starting in 2025

 

Why are fares still not rounded to the near .25 is still beyond me. Requiring people to keep carrying dimes and nickel is ridiculous

couldn't the fares just be a flat $2.00 instead of making it $2.10 if they were to go that route? Least I use the app for fares now lol

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, Mtatransit said:

Why are fares still not rounded to the near .25 is still beyond me. Requiring people to keep carrying dimes and nickel is ridiculous

Absolutely zero brain cells involved.

Dwell time creates high costs. Management has never rideen a bus in their lives so they dont understand.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, Mtatransit said:

Questions:

(1) Why are passengers traveling interstate not allowed to buy or use transfers?

(2) Why are fares lower in the Southern Division than in the Northern Division?

(3) Why are zone increments higher for interstate routes than for intrastate? NJT's costs for continuing from one town to the next don't change based on where the passenger boarded, yet one passenger might pay 50 cents extra while another pays 75 cents extra. (My thought: Maybe keep the fare at $2 for the first local zone, $0.75 for each additional zone, and a flat surcharge to cross the river.)

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Gotham Bus Co. said:

 Why are passengers traveling interstate not allowed to buy or use transfers?

You can't enforce the interstate fare structure if transfers were allowed. Pax would buy to the closest point from NYC and then transition to the intrastate fare structure.

1 hour ago, Gotham Bus Co. said:

Why are fares lower in the Southern Division than in the Northern Division?

Higher incomes and service density.

1 hour ago, Gotham Bus Co. said:

Why are zone increments higher for interstate routes than for intrastate? NJT's costs for continuing from one town to the next don't change based on where the passenger boarded, yet one passenger might pay 50 cents extra while another pays 75 cents extra.

Interstate operations ARE more expensive per mile because of tolls and charges at the PABT.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, jass said:

Absolutely zero brain cells involved.

Dwell time creates high costs. Management has never rideen a bus in their lives so they dont understand.

The same management that buys cruiser buses for busy Hudson County routes. Have you ever tried to get off an MCI with 8 people standing in the aisle? It’s absolutely awful. Nobody managing NJT has ridden a bus.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

@Gotham Bus Co. I would tend to agree with your structure....just charge the intrastate fare and then a surcharge to cross the river. 

An extreme example is the 317 from Asbury Park to Phiadelphia...I think it's $9.75 to Camden, but $21+ to Philly, even though getting off and reboarding would only cost you $1.95 for the Camden - Philly leg. (Some routes have their boundary at Bridge Plaza while others have it at WRTC...though the 317 itself might be the only one that has it at WRTC, I forget offhand)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, danielhg121 said:

What's preventing you from just buying a cheaper fare and staying onboard the bus? How do bus operators keep track of who paid to cross the river?

They will kick you off. If the bus is crowded or depending on the driver you might get away with it. But others will remember people's faces and they will stop the bus and make you pay more or kick you off.

In my experience the NJT operators are not scared to enforce the fare like how NYCT operators are. I don't see fare evasion on the NJT routes I ride. In NYC enforcing the fare is considered a safety issue.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, checkmatechamp13 said:

@Gotham Bus Co. I would tend to agree with your structure....just charge the intrastate fare and then a surcharge to cross the river. 

An extreme example is the 317 from Asbury Park to Phiadelphia...I think it's $9.75 to Camden, but $21+ to Philly, even though getting off and reboarding would only cost you $1.95 for the Camden - Philly leg. (Some routes have their boundary at Bridge Plaza while others have it at WRTC...though the 317 itself might be the only one that has it at WRTC, I forget offhand)

 No route has the boundary at Bridge Plaza. Anything from Philly to WRTC is 1.95, if you are going past WRTC, it’s 3.05. The expresses have to change the zone by default once leaving Bridge Plaza because they don’t service WRTC; the 408X stops at WRTC is stupid, it kills the time saving on that trip. North Camden people don’t have that option of 1.95 unless they was to get off and get back on and pay again. All of Camden is zone 2 except for WRTC when going to/from Philly. Buses that start/end at WRTC remain zone 2 1.60 for all of Camden. 
 

A lot of people in Camden will take the bus to WRTC then get on PATCO. They don’t realize they are paying more to do that, but to them it sounds cheaper. 3.40 with patco; 3.05 if you stay on njt. 
 

Brooklawn Express Zone 1-3, 4.25

Gloucester Express Zone 1-3, 4.25

If you want to get off at Bridge Plaza coming from zone 3-2 it’s 2.25. This is for the Brooklawn and Gloucester Expresses 402,408,410,412. 
 

WRTC to Philly 1.95(anything in between)

Philly to WRTC 1.95(anything in between)

Philly to Camden 3.05(anything past wrtc)

Camden to Philly 3.05(anything past wrtc)

These people know to specify Camden or WRTC for the correct fare.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 hours ago, MNR Beacon Line said:

They will kick you off. If the bus is crowded or depending on the driver you might get away with it. But others will remember people's faces and they will stop the bus and make you pay more or kick you off.

What if you get off the bus and then get back on? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 1/25/2024 at 4:06 PM, Gotham Bus Co. said:

If I board the bus in ThisTown and ride to ThatTown, why do I pay less to cross the zone barrier than someone else who boarded in NY?

NJT interstate buses incur tolls and platform fees to operate between NY and NJ. That cost has to be allocated.

 

On 1/25/2024 at 8:51 PM, checkmatechamp13 said:

I would tend to agree with your structure....just charge the intrastate fare and then a surcharge to cross the river. 

A flat surcharge is regressive. It spikes our friends along the NJ waterfront with inflated fares. Spreading out the impact across zones is much better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 1/25/2024 at 1:52 PM, jass said:

Absolutely zero brain cells involved.

Dwell time creates high costs. Management has never rideen a bus in their lives so they dont understand.

The railroads tend to see a mix of high and low platforms with little tangible effort in changing that to a single standard. The trains are high-floor.

I think that should tell you everything you need to know.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, JAzumah said:

NJT interstate buses incur tolls and platform fees to operate between NY and NJ. That cost has to be allocated.

A flat surcharge is regressive. It spikes our friends along the NJ waterfront with inflated fares. Spreading out the impact across zones is much better.

 

Then maybe every route should get the Interstate/Intra-commuter zone structure.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 1/27/2024 at 11:30 AM, JAzumah said:

NJT interstate buses incur tolls and platform fees to operate between NY and NJ. That cost has to be allocated.

 

A flat surcharge is regressive. It spikes our friends along the NJ waterfront with inflated fares. Spreading out the impact across zones is much better.

That's the whole point of his idea to have one fare scale with a surcharge to cross the river, rather than two separate scales.

Under his idea, an intra-Newark trip would be $2. (Currently $1.60 and proposed to be $1.80). A Newark- Bloomfield trip becomes $2.75 (currently $2.55, proposed to be $2.90). A Newark - West Caldwell trip becomes $3.50 (currently $3.15, proposed to be $3.60).

Going out from the Hudson River, a trip to Union City becomes $4.75 (currently $3.50, proposed to be $4), a trip to Jersey City or Hackensack becomes $5.50 (currently $4.50, proposed to be $5.20 IIRC), a trip to Newark, Clifton/Passaic, or Bayonne becomes $6.25 (currently $6, proposed to be $6.90).

The initial charge and increments can be adjusted (e.g. $1.75 instead of $2) and the zone charges can fluctuate (e.g. $0.50 instead of $0.75). Special fares can be calculated for 1 zone interstate if necessary 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 1/27/2024 at 11:30 AM, JAzumah said:
On 1/25/2024 at 4:06 PM, Gotham Bus Co. said:

 

NJT interstate buses incur tolls and platform fees to operate between NY and NJ. That cost has to be allocated.

Does the PANYNJ give discounts to NJT? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 months later...

from the link in the above post:

Quote

Paper Tickets:  Customers should bring unused paper tickets purchased prior to June 1, 2024 to a customer service office (locations and hours listed below). Customers will need to provide contact information and should have their receipts with them in order to expedite the refund process. For customers who don’t have their receipt, you will be asked to provide contact information and the last four digits of the credit card used for the purchase to have the money refunded to the credit card. Refunds will take longer to process for those customers who have no receipt or other transaction information. Customer service staff will document the number and type of tickets received and forward them to NJ TRANSIT’s Refund Department for verification and processing before issuing the appropriate refund.  Refund processing is expected to take approximately three to four weeks.

Not that I bother with anybody's refund policy (to sum it up, it's not worth the hassle for me), but reading this snippet, I'd be assed out here anyway, because virtually everytime I use the TVM's, I pay in cash... I don't bother printing out receipts after purchasing these tickets.

Starting this weekend, I'm going to (try to) use up the tickets I do have left.... I say "try to" because for starters, this one ticket I have of/for the #114 (dated 8/23/22), I tried using earlier this year & the b/o refused to accept it.... The badly faded ones (which the #114 one in question actually isn't), I'm just going to throw out...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.