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Subway and Bus Ridership

Subway
Introduction
At a Glance
Ridership by Subway Station
The Ten Busiest Subway Stations 2012

Bus
Introduction
At a Glance
Ridership by Bus Route
The Ten Busiest Local Bus Routes 2012

 


Introduction to Subway Ridership

Subway ridership consists of all passengers (other than NYC Transit employees) who enter the subway system, including passengers who transfer from buses.  Ridership does not include passengers who exit the subway or passengers who transfer from other subway lines, with the exception of out-of-system transfers; e.g., between the Lexington Av/63 St F train icon station and the Lexington Avenue N Line icon Q Line icon R Line icon/59 St 4 Line icon 5 Line icon 6 Line icon station, where customers use their MetroCard to make the transfer.

Average weekday, Saturday, and Sunday ridership includes every weekday, Saturday, and Sunday in the year, except major holidays and days when the subway system was closed or operated fare-free (Saturday, August 27 and Sunday, August 28, 2011 due to Hurricane Irene, and Monday, October 29 through Friday, November 2, 2012 due to Superstorm Sandy).  Average weekend ridership is the two-day sum of average Saturday plus average Sunday ridership. Ridership on major holidays (New Year’s Day, Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas) is included only in the annual total.

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Subway Ridership at a Glance

Year Average Weekday Average Saturday Average Sunday Average Weekend Annual Total
2007
5,042,263
2,917,270
2,211,502
5,128,772
1,562,515,065
2008
5,225,675
2,979,391
2,310,944
5,290,334
1,623,881,369
2009
5,086,833
2,928,247
2,283,601
5,211,848
1,579,866,600
2010
5,156,913
3,031,289
2,335,077
5,366,366
1,604,198,017
2011
5,284,295
3,082,463
2,414,587
5,497,050
1,640,434,672
2012
5,380,184
3,172,627
2,490,736
5,663,363
1,654,582,265

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Ridership by Subway Station

The New York City subway system has 468 stations – the largest number of public transit subway stations of any system in the world.  However, the table of ridership by station linked below lists 421 stations, with stations connected by transfer passageways combined into station complexes, since ridership cannot be accurately allocated to each station in the complex.  For example, the 14 St A Line icon C Line icon E Line icon station is combined with the 8 Av L Line icon station. The station names and lines stopping at each station reflect service at the end of 2012.

In the tables linked below, stations are listed alphabetically by borough, and the rankings are by 2012 ridership.  The rankings end at 418 rather than 421 stations, since three stations (Smith-9 Sts F Line icon G Line icon, Cortlandt Street 1 Line icon, and Aqueduct Racetrack A Line icon) were closed for the entire year.  The “systemwide adjustment” accounts for miscellaneous ridership and other adjustments that can not be allocated by station.


Please click below for the complete tables of subway station ridership.  In these tables, stations that were temporarily closed (either fully or partially) are highlighted in blue; click on the station name for the closure dates.  For these stations, zero ridership was included in the averages for any days when the station was closed, except for the days when the entire subway was closed or fare-free.

Average Weekday Ridership
Average Weekend (Saturday + Sunday) Ridership
Annual Ridership

 

 

 

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Introduction to Bus Ridership

Bus ridership includes all passengers who board buses using a valid MetroCard, cash, transfer, Select Bus Service ticket, or pass.  Ridership does not include employees, non-revenue passengers (e.g., children under 44” tall traveling with an adult), and B42 riders boarding inside the paid zone of the Rockaway Parkway L Line icon subway station.  A methodology change was implemented in 2010 to exclude certain non-revenue passengers from ridership.  Ridership for years before 2010 in the “at a glance” and Ridership by Route tables below is adjusted to be consistent with the 2010 methodology.

Average weekday, Saturday, and Sunday ridership includes every weekday, Saturday, and Sunday in the year, except major holidays and days when the bus system was closed or operated fare-free (Saturday, August 27 and Sunday, August 28, 2011 due to Hurricane Irene, and Monday, October 29 through Friday, November 2, 2012 due to Superstorm Sandy).  Average weekend ridership is the two-day sum of average Saturday plus average Sunday ridership.  Ridership on major holidays (New Year’s Day, Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas) is included only in the annual total.

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MTA New York City Transit Bus Ridership at a Glance

Year Average Weekday Average Saturday Average Sunday Average Weekend Annual Total
2007
2,337,153
1,454,400
1,070,609
2,525,010
731,834,925
2008
2,354,190
1,443,771
1,093,005
2,536,776
739,419,934
2009
2,287,098
1,407,332
1,067,398
2,474,730
716,824,107
2010
2,229,257
1,376,735
1,025,084
2,401,819
696,923,393
2011
2,151,877
1,306,386
999,837
2,306,223
670,698,694
2012
2,169,311
1,309,666
998,863
2,308,529
667,910,621

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MTA Bus Company Ridership at a Glance

Year Average Weekday Average Saturday Average Sunday Average Weekend Annual Total
2007
362,239
191,242
135,077
326,320
109,531,869
2008
397,438
208,500
151,255
359,754
120,663,636
2009
392,488
208,059
152,627
360,686
119,521,109
2010
394,509
213,770
153,969
367,739
120,226,874
2011
392,368
210,708
154,774
365,482
119,381,038
2012
400,786
218,658
161,873
380,531
120,877,799

 

 

Ridership by Bus Route

At the end of 2012, the New York City Transit bus system had 190 local, 5 Select Bus Service, and 29 express routes, and the MTA Bus system had 45 local and 35 express routes. Local routes begin with one or two letters corresponding to the major borough of operation (B=Brooklyn, Bx=Bronx, M=Manhattan, Q=Queens, S=Staten Island); NYC Transit express routes begin with the letter “X” and MTA Bus express routes begin with a two-borough designation (eg: BxM or QM). In the ridership averages, zero was included for any day during the year on which a given route did not operate, except for the days when the entire bus system was closed or fare-free.

In the tables linked below, certain pairs of routes that effectively operate as a single route are combined.  For example:

  • The S48 and S98 both run along Forest Avenue in Staten Island. The S48 makes all local stops, and the S98 makes limited stops.
  • The X12 and X42 both run between Mariners Harbor in Staten Island and midtown Manhattan; the X12 travels via lower Manhattan, and the X42 bypasses lower Manhattan.
  • The Bx40 and Bx42 both run along Tremont Avenue in the Bronx; the Bx40 eastern terminal is at Fort Schuyler, and the Bx42 eastern terminal is on Harding Avenue.

The “systemwide adjustment” accounts for miscellaneous ridership not allocated by route and should be added to the route totals to match the official system-wide ridership shown in the “at a glance” table above.

Please click below for the complete tables of bus route ridership:

MTA New York City Transit

Average Weekday Ridership
Average Weekend (Saturday + Sunday) Ridership
Annual Ridership

 

 



MTA Bus Company

Average Weekday Ridership
Average Weekend (Saturday + Sunday) Ridership
Annual Ridership

 

 

 

 

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