Home » MTA to test ‘fare capping’ for NYC transit, new discounts for commuter rail

MTA to test ‘fare capping’ for NYC transit, new discounts for commuter rail

By Trains Staff | December 14, 2021

| Last updated on April 1, 2024


Four-month pilot programs to begin March 1

Logo of Metropolitan Transportation AuthorityNEW YORK — Users of New York City Transit subways and buses will pay no more than $33 in fares per week under a “fare capping” pilot program to begin March 1, 2022, Metropolitan Transportation Authority officials announced Monday.

The New York Daily News reports that riders who use the new OMNY tap-and-pay system will get all rides free after they pay the basic $2.75 fare a dozen times between Monday and the following Sunday. Currently, riders must pay $33 up front for a week of unlimited rides.

The four-month pilot program is set to be approved Wednesday at an MTA board meeting.

It is one of several moves the MTA plans as it seeks to entice riders to return following the COVID-19 pandemic. For commuter rail users, the MTA plans to offer a flat $5 “City ticket” for trips on Metro-North and the Long Island Rail Road that begin or end in New York City. There will also be a 10% discount on monthly tickets and a 20-trip ticket book that will represent a 20% savings over the cost of 20 individual peak-period fares. Like the NYC Transit program, those discounts will begin March 1 and are scheduled to run through June 30.

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