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Starting in January, MetroCards will no longer be sold, and unlimited passes will be retired, according to the agency.
A long-desired feature has returned for New York City MTA commuters. Subway and bus riders can now find their trip history ...
MTA proposes a fare increase to $3 and a 7.5% toll hike, signaling a MetroCard phaseout for the OMNY system by 2026.
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ABC 7 New York on MSNMTA plans to increase subway and bus fares to $3 in January, delaying hike for 6 monthsThe base fare was supposed to increase next month. But, the transition to the new OMNY tap and pay system delayed the normal ...
The dime increase in the subway and bus fare, from $2.90 to an even three bucks come January, doesn’t overjoy us, but it’s ...
New York City subway and bus fares are expected to go up to $3 on Jan. 4, MTA officials announced during the agency’s monthly ...
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Recently, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority installed a Fair Fares kiosk in the customer ...
The MTA began transitioning away from the 30-year-old MetroCard with the launch of OMNY in 2019. It plans to stop selling MetroCards on Dec. 31, but riders will still be able to use them for at ...
Commuters may start paying $3 to ride subways and buses in January 2026, as announced in an MTA board meeting on Wednesday.
The MTA is in the middle of transitioning away from its 30-year-old MetroCard to its new OMNY system, which allows customers to pay for trips with the tap of a phone or fare card.
OMNY, the MTA’s tap-to-pay system, will be the only way to pay come January. NY1 asked if the delay was so riders aren’t hit with a new payment system and a price hike at the same time.
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