Skip to Content
Streetsblog California home
Streetsblog California home
Log In
Streetsblog USA

Why Is Transit Ridership Falling?

Photo: Chris Yarzab/Flickr

Transit ridership took a turn for the worse in 2016. In all but a handful of cities, fewer people rode trains and buses, even in some places, like Los Angeles, that have invested significantly in expanding capacity.

It's not just a one-year blip, either. In many American cities, the drop in transit ridership is an established trend. The big question is why.

Transit consultant Jarrett Walker at Human Transit wants more than vague speculation about the effect of low gas prices and ride-hailing services. He's looking for more specific research about causes and effects -- and soon:

Bottom line: We need research! Not the sort of formally peer reviewed research that will take a year to publish, but faster work by real transportation scholars that can report preliminary results in time to guide action. I am not a transportation researcher, but there are plenty of them out there, and this is our moment of need.

Here are my research questions:

  • Which global causes seem to matter? Straight regression analysis, once you get data you believe. Probably the study will need to start with a small dataset of transit agencies, so that there’s time to talk with each agency and understand their unique data issues.
  • What’s happening to the quantity of transit? If ridership is falling because service is falling, this isn’t a surprise. If ridership is falling because service is getting slower — which means lower frequency and speed at the same cost — well, that wouldn’t be surprising either.
  • How does the decline correlate to types of service? Is this fall happening in dense areas or just in car-based suburbs? Is it happening on routes that are designed for high ridership, or only on those that are designed for coverage purposes (services retained because three sympathetic people need them rather than because the bus will be full). Is it correlated to frequency or span changes? Heads up, local geeks! A lot could be done looking at data for your own transit agency -- route by route and even (where available) stop by stop, to analyze where in your metro the fall is really occurring.

More recommended reading today: Green Caltrain looks at whether Bay Area cities are adapting to new rules designed to promote low-car development. And Urban Milwaukee floats the idea of using voluntary bike registration fees to pay for bike infrastructure.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog California

Monday’s Headlines

The World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims was Sunday, and Dozens of Cities Worldwide Planned Memorials...

November 17, 2025

Report: Biden Infrastructure Bill Spurred Increase in State and Local Highway Spending

The Urban Institute found an overall increase in capital investment in ground transportation — mostly on highways — and flat investment in public transit.

November 16, 2025

Transportation Politics Is Inherently Radical

And we need to embrace that if we want to win.

November 16, 2025

The Week in Short Videos

High-Speed Rail, an L.A. Metro smart bike locker how-to, and a push for a new pedestrian plaza in L.A.'s Koreatown

November 15, 2025

Advocates React: Sunset Supervisor ‘Recalled’ Again

Beya Alcaraz resigns a week after Mayor Lurie appoints her to fill out the term of former D4 Supervisor Joel Engardio.

November 14, 2025

2026 Could Be the Year Everything Changes for California High-Speed Rail

What's being built. The financial plans. Everything short of the route could be different a year from now.

November 13, 2025
See all posts