Teban54
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I am apparently late to the discussion about distance-based fares, and I didn't read through everything in detail. (I know that sounds ironic, but my IRL schedule has been very hectic lately.) But I do want to share my experiences from Singapore when I lived there.
Singapore uses an entirely distance-based fare system and a "closed loop" system. On both subways and buses, you need to both tap in and tap out. Even though buses have readers at all doors, you can only board at the front door and exit at the rear door(s), and readers are programmed to be exclusively for such.
This is how the fare ladder looks like:
Too long? They actually have this on display at every bus stop. They do use a more condensed table that looks like the below... But still.
Does this look enticing to you? Would you feel encouraged if you occasionally need to use a bus (which, you know, seems to be the whole motivation behind distance-based fares in the first place)?
Most transit riders in Singapore pay with charge cards similar to CharlieCards. IIRC, tickets intended for a smaller number of rides are also available (like CharlieTickets but with variable deduction per ride). But ticket machines are only available at subway stations and bus interchanges. I have not paid for a bus ride with cash myself, and I can't even imagine how that would look like. Also, on printed brochures and on information panels at bus stops, bus routes have to be listed with the distance to every bus stop, in order for people to calculate their fares.
(FYI, while Singapore has two more rapid transit lines than Boston does, its coverage is still far from perfect, especially considering its density is a few times higher than Boston. Many neighborhoods and sometimes entire towns still need to take feeder buses to connect to the subway. Due to the year-round 90 °F heat, walking to a subway station is also arguably less popular than it is here.)
The closed-loop system also eliminates all-door boarding as an option, and it does greatly increase dwell time at busy bus stops. Because of the need to tap out, dwell times are actually longer than usual. This is worsened by the large share of double-decker fleets. It got to the point where Singapore specifically asked for custom-made 3-door double deckers, just so that people can form two lines to exit the bus.
Now, the system isn't without merits:
Singapore uses an entirely distance-based fare system and a "closed loop" system. On both subways and buses, you need to both tap in and tap out. Even though buses have readers at all doors, you can only board at the front door and exit at the rear door(s), and readers are programmed to be exclusively for such.
This is how the fare ladder looks like:
Too long? They actually have this on display at every bus stop. They do use a more condensed table that looks like the below... But still.
Does this look enticing to you? Would you feel encouraged if you occasionally need to use a bus (which, you know, seems to be the whole motivation behind distance-based fares in the first place)?
Most transit riders in Singapore pay with charge cards similar to CharlieCards. IIRC, tickets intended for a smaller number of rides are also available (like CharlieTickets but with variable deduction per ride). But ticket machines are only available at subway stations and bus interchanges. I have not paid for a bus ride with cash myself, and I can't even imagine how that would look like. Also, on printed brochures and on information panels at bus stops, bus routes have to be listed with the distance to every bus stop, in order for people to calculate their fares.
(FYI, while Singapore has two more rapid transit lines than Boston does, its coverage is still far from perfect, especially considering its density is a few times higher than Boston. Many neighborhoods and sometimes entire towns still need to take feeder buses to connect to the subway. Due to the year-round 90 °F heat, walking to a subway station is also arguably less popular than it is here.)
The closed-loop system also eliminates all-door boarding as an option, and it does greatly increase dwell time at busy bus stops. Because of the need to tap out, dwell times are actually longer than usual. This is worsened by the large share of double-decker fleets. It got to the point where Singapore specifically asked for custom-made 3-door double deckers, just so that people can form two lines to exit the bus.
Now, the system isn't without merits:
- Shorter trips are indeed cheaper, as expected.
- (However, because there's still a base fare, a short trip to the local supermarket can still cost more than 50% of an hour-long cross-country commute.)
- The system allows much easier fare integration between buses and subways. If you transfer, the distance simply continues counting from where it left off.
- (However, Singapore only has these two transit modes, as commuter rail is not a thing. The subway also doesn't allow free out-of-system transfers except at designated stations, even though there are other stations where that would make sense.)
- Fare evasion rates are practically zero.
- (However, this is probably more of an enforcement problem, and a larger-scale societal problem, than a fare structure one.)
- Data analysts have a much easier time getting origin-destination data.
- (Not what we're discussing here.)