Serves: Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, the Bronx, and through mta staten Island Railway (sir) Staten Island. Ridership



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Fares & MetroCard


The fare for a subway or local bus ride is $2. The fare for an express bus ride is $5. If you qualify for reduced fare, you can travel for half fare. Up to three children 44 inches tall and under ride for free on subways and local buses when accompanied by a fare paying adult. Infants (under two years of age) ride express buses free if the child sits on the lap of the accompanying adult.

Pay-Per-Ride MetroCard

Buy as many rides as you want from $4 to $80.

Put $10 or more on your card and receive a 20 percent bonus. For example, a $20 purchase gives you $24 on your card. 12 trips for the price of 10.

You get an automatic free transfer between subway and bus, or between buses.

Buy an unlimited number of subway and bus rides for a fixed price. Choose from a 1-Day Fun Pass, a 7-Day, 30-Day, 7-Day Express Bus Plus, or a 30-Day Unlimited Ride MetroCard accepted on JFK AirTrain only.



1-Day Fun Pass
Cost: $7, reduced fare not available
Good for unlimited subway and local bus rides from first use until 3 a.m. the following day. Sold at MetroCard Vending Machines and at neighborhood stores. Not available at station booths.

Where to Buy | Back to top

7-Day Unlimited Ride MetroCard
Cost: $24, reduced fare $12
Good for unlimited subway and local bus rides until midnight, 7 days from day of first use.

Where to Buy | Back to top

30-Day Unlimited Ride MetroCard
Cost: $76, reduced fare $38
Good for unlimited subway and local bus rides until midnight, 30 days from day of first use. This card is insured against loss when purchased at a vending machine with a credit or debit/ATM card.

Rules of Conduct


MTA New York City Transit subway and bus rules make everyone’s ride better.
Failure to pay the fare or violation of any of the rules can result in arrest, fine, and/or ejection.

Please do not:

  • Damage subway or bus property – that includes drawing graffiti, or scratchiti

  • Litter or create unsanitary conditions

  • Smoke anywhere on NYC Transit property

  • Drink alcoholic beverages

  • Panhandle or beg

  • Play a radio audible to others

  • Use amplified devices on platforms

  • Use more than one seat

  • Block free movement

  • Lie down

  • Engage in unauthorized commercial activity

  • Enter tracks, tunnels, or non-public areas

  • Carry open bulky items likely to cause inconvenience

The MTA Network


MTA subways, buses, and railroads move 2.4 billion New Yorkers a year, about one in every three users of mass transit in the United States and two-thirds of the nation's rail riders.

MTA bridges and tunnels carry nearly 300 million vehicles annually — more than any bridge and tunnel authority in the nation.

This vast transportation network — North America's largest — serves a population of 14.6 million people in the 5,000-square-mile area fanning out from New York City through Long Island, southeastern New York State, and Connecticut.

Who Are We?

The MTA network links the diverse parts of New York, enabling residents and visitors to get where they want to go swiftly and at reasonable cost. MTA services offer the region efficient, environmentally sound travel alternatives to gridlocked streets and highways. And the mobility provided by the MTA helps ensure New York's place as a world center of finance, commerce, culture, and entertainment.

While nearly 85% of the nation's workers need automobiles to get to their jobs, four of every five rush-hour commuters to New York City's central business district avoid traffic congestion by taking transit services, most of it operated by the MTA. MTA customers travel on America's largest bus fleet and on more trains than all the rest of the country's subways and commuter railroads combined.

It is impossible to place a dollar figure on the MTA's land, equipment, and facilities, located on or under some of the world's most expensive real estate. But the greatest value of the MTA lies in its beneficial impact on the New York region's economy and quality of life. New York ranks near the top among the nation's best cities for business, says Fortune magazine, because it has "what every city desires, a workable mass transit system."

Since 1982 the MTA has been carrying out the largest public works rebuilding project in the country. Funded by federal, state, and local government and by the issuance of debt, the MTA’s most recent capital program has generated an average 31,760 private-sector jobs, $1.3 billion in wages, $100 million in state and local tax revenues, and $3.52 billion in economic activity annually.

MetroCard® and E-ZPass™ revolutionized fare and toll payment on subways, buses, bridges, and tunnels. MetroCard automated fare collection has brought free transfers between subways and buses; multiride bonuses; and weekly, monthly, and daily transit passes, reducing the cost of public transportation for the first time. E-ZPass electronic toll collection has transformed local and regional highway travel, speeding the trips of millions of MTA customers while reducing traffic congestion and pollution.

A public-benefit corporation chartered by New York State in 1965, the MTA is governed by a 17-person Board. Members are nominated by the Governor, with some recommended by New York City's mayor and the county executives of Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, Dutchess, Orange, Rockland, and Putnam counties, with the members representing the latter four casting one collective vote. The Board also has six rotating non-voting seats held by representatives of organized labor and the Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee (PCAC), which serves as a voice for users of MTA transit and commuter facilities. All Board members are confirmed by the New York State Senate.

MTA is committed to ensuring that no person is excluded from participation in, or denied the benefits of its services on the basis of race, color or national origin as protected by Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended (“Title VI”). If you believe you have been subjected to discrimination under Title VI, you may file a written complaint with MTA Office of Civil Rights, 2 Broadway, 16th floor, New York, N.Y. 10004.



MTA Totals at a Glance

2004 operating budget

$8.0 billion

Average weekday passengers

7,711,945

Rail and subway lines, and bus routes

343

Rail and subway cars

8,259

Buses

4,895

Track miles

2,058

Bus route miles

2,967

Rail stations

734

Employees

63,884


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