What percentage of NYC uses public transportation?
54% of households in New York City do not own a car, and rely on public transportation.
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According to the American Community Survey (ACS), public transportation commuters constituted about 5 percent of all workers in the United States in 2019.
Not only is the New York City public transportation system the most extensive in the country, but it's also one of the few that operates all night long. Both subway trains and bus services run 24/7.
Paris has been named the world's top city for public transit, according to William Russell's Global Transport Index 2023. The city's transport network is praised not only for being affordable (with the average ticket costing just $2.29), but also for having numerous transport options.
Total weekly national public transit ridership hovered around 180 million in early March 2020, plummeted down to 40 million by April 2020, and has slowly increased since then but now hovers at 140 million, significantly below the pre-pandemic baseline.
Today, Schwieterman cites the strong economy (meaning people can afford to buy cars), ride-sharing or ride-hailing, the popularity of a work-from-home lifestyle and the bus riders themselves as reasons for a decline in ridership.
The country's largest metro system is the New York City Subway which has a system length of 337 kilometers / 209 miles. The country's oldest metro system is the city of Chicago's L Train which began operation in 1892.
The first public transportation system in the United States was set up in Boston in the early 17th century and consisted of horse carts and ferries. Decades later, a similar ferry system was set up in the city of Philadelphia to carry passengers to nearby Camden, New Jersey.