Skip to content

Here’s how much TransLink fares are going up in Metro Vancouver on July 1

While we’ll be busy celebrating Canada Day on July 1, TransLink will also be rolling out their annual fare increases.
Transit users will pay more per ride as of July 1. Photo Dan Toulgoet
Transit users will pay more per ride as of July 1. Photo Dan Toulgoet

While we’ll be busy celebrating Canada Day on July 1, TransLink will also be rolling out their annual fare increases.

As of July 1, TransLink fares will increase by five to 10 cents for single-use fares, bringing a one-zone adult fare up to $3, a two-zone adult fare to $4.25 and a three-zone adult fare to $5.75 per ride. Similarly, the concession fare rate per will also go up five cents a ride at all the zone levels.

For Compass Card users, the “stored value” rate will increase by 10 cents at each zone and rate level. A DayPass will be $10.50 for an adult in all zones, while the concession rate goes up to $8.25 — that’s a 25-cent increase.

Lastly, monthly passes will also cost more — $2 to $3 per month overall. Adult one-zone goes from $95 to $98, two-zone from $128 to $131 and the three-zone from $174 to $177. The concession rate for a monthly pass (all zones) will jump from $54 to $56. All told, TransLink monthly pass users will be forking out $24 to $36 more each for the next year.

“These modest increases are helping to fund the biggest transportation expansion in the region’s history,” says TransLink of their annual fare changes.

As part of their 10-year vision phase two plan, TransLink will continue to raise fares annually; we can expect increases of 10 to 15 cents a single fare and 50 cents to $1 on monthly passes (in addition to any increases approved as part of phase one) in both 2020 and 2021. To this end, TransLink is also increasing revenues through property taxes, parking sales tax and other measures, aimed at being “balanced across Metro Vancouver residents, affecting transit users, drivers, property owners and real estate developers.”

TransLink says the fare increases are part of the $43 million per year funding that will represent about five per cent of the total of phase two plan funding. What’s in the phase two plan? That includes the Millennium Line Broadway Extension, Surrey-Newton-Guildford LRT, Expo/Millennium Line upgrades program and additional operating capital for road work, walking and cycling infrastructure, and bus and rail operations.

Click here for original article.