By Dec. 31, 2025, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority will end the sale and distribution of MetroCards. Here's what it means for NYC subway and bus riders ...
New York City subway riders will no longer need physical MetroCards by the end of this year, ending decades of use for the ubiquitous yellow and blue pass.
MTA Chair Janno Lieber just revealed that the MTA will likely retire MetroCards by the end of 2025, going all-in on OMNY by next summer.
If you prefer using a physical card, you can buy a reloadable OMNY card for $5 and load and reload the card at thousands of ...
Last week, MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber announced the end of the MetroCard. The agency has long suggested it will phase out ...
The cards debuted in 1993. Instead of swiping MetroCards at subway turnstiles or on buses, riders will exclusively use the authority’s new tap-and-go system, which was introduced in 2019 and ...
NJ Transit is a few months away from rolling out its own fare card. And PATH is planning a card for its new TAPP system.
OMNY card readers installed at a New York City subway station. The contactless system is set to fully replace the MetroCard ...
The 32-year-old MTA MetroCard will cease operations Dec. 31, but other fare cards are coming. NJ Transit will debut one in ...
The phase out of the old vinyl swipe cards comes after the MTA's rollout of its tap-to-pay fare system faced years of delays.
Commuters can now forget the go card and tap on and off their Brisbane City Council buses and metro services using a credit ...
The MT announced that it will stop selling the MetroCard on December 31, 2025, marking the final step in the full transition to the OMNY system.