Search results
Results from the Go Local Guru Content Network
NEW YORK — Out with the old, in with the OMNY. That's the name the MTA has given the new tap-to-pay fare system that will eventually replace the MetroCard — and straphangers will give it a ...
For example, with a pay-per-ride fare of $2.75 and a weekly unlimited MetroCard cost of $33 (as of October 2021), a passenger would still pay $2.75 per trip if they made 12 or fewer trips in a week; under the proposal, they would pay no more than $33 within a week, even if they made 13 or more trips.
For Pay-Per-Ride MetroCard and OMNY customers, there is no free transfer back onto the same route on which the fare was initially paid, or between the following buses: No transfer in the opposite direction (but transfers are permitted to buses in the same direction): M1, M2, M3, M4: 70 M101, M102, M103: 70 Bx1 and Bx2: 70
NEW YORK — The MetroCard's reign is coming to an end. The MTA plans to start testing a brand-new fare payment system — with a new name — in May. The transit agency has dubbed its new system ...
As a result, no OMNY customer would pay more than $33 per week, which is the current price of a seven-day unlimited-ride MetroCard, and customers would receive the benefit of a seven-day unlimited ...
Standard New York City transit tokens were used on the Roosevelt Island Tramway until 2004, when MetroCard was implemented. OMNY has been accepted on the tram since August 2023. The fare using OMNY or pay-per-ride MetroCard is the same as that on the buses and subways, $2.90 for a one-way trip, as of 2023.
NEW YORK CITY — The MetroCard's sleek tap-to-pay replacement can now be purchased in a select handful of subway stations, MTA officials said. The first OMNY Card vending machines will "finally ...
From a $1 MetroCard fee to how to save on a 30-day, tips to keep in mind as subway increases take effect Sunday. Amy Sara Clark , Patch Staff Posted Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 7:11 pm ET