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Fare product Fare type Price 7-Day Unlimited [2] (and weekly fare cap [26] [27]) Full fare $34 Reduced fare MetroCard $17.00 Reduced fare OMNY [30] $16.20 30-Day Unlimited [2] Full fare $132 Reduced fare $66 1-Day Unlimited SmartLink [6] $10 7-Day Unlimited SmartLink [6] $34.50 30-Day Unlimited SmartLink [6] $106 7-Day Express Bus Plus [2] $64
Fare product Fare type Price 7-Day Unlimited [105] (and weekly fare cap [129] [130]) Full fare $34 Reduced fare MetroCard $17.00 Reduced fare OMNY [133] $16.20 30-Day Unlimited [105] Full fare $132 Reduced fare $66 1-Day Unlimited SmartLink [109] $10 7-Day Unlimited SmartLink [109] $34.50 30-Day Unlimited SmartLink [109] $106 7-Day Express Bus ...
Pre-loaded SmartLink cards with 10 trips are available at all stations for $31.00 (10 trips at $2.60 each, plus a $5.00 card fee). However, MetroCard Vending Machines (MVMs) at all PATH stations are able to refill the SmartLink cards to a monetary amount equal to 1, 2, 4, 10, 20 and 40 trips as well as the daily or 30 day unlimited passes.
Unlimited-ride MetroCards are available for 7-day and 30-day periods. [45] One-day "Fun Pass" and 14-day cards were also introduced but have since been discontinued. [46] In April 2016, MTA solicited proposals for a contactless "New Fare Payment System" to replace the MetroCard by 2022. [47]
By 2024, MetroCard will be discontinued and all Bee-Line passengers will then use OMNY. The Reduced-Fare MetroCard Program will also be converted over to OMNY." [9] For certain periods during the summer and winter of 2022, the buses were fare-free. [10] As of the summer of 2023, buses are fare free until Labor Day 2023.
As The Post’s map shows, the cost of entering the congestion zone, defined as entering Manhattan anywhere on 60th Street or below, in a car from Jan. 5 will be significantly higher —between $9 ...
The MTA offers 7-day and 30-day unlimited ride programs that can lower the effective per-ride fare significantly. [186] Reduced fares are available for the elderly and people with disabilities. [17] [187]
Realtor.com reported the sale price per square foot was $903. Nearly 40% of 18- to 24-year-olds surveyed names New York City as the most overpriced housing market in the country.