Awesome
A frequent transit map shows bus and rail lines that run frequently all day, distinguishing them from lines that run infrequently or only during rush hour. Analagous to a road map that distinguishes highways and arterial streets from local streets, a frequent transit map shows where you can ride <b>without worrying about a transit schedule</b>. See “The Case for Frequency Mapping”.
Contributions welcome. See “Contributing” below.
North America
- Akron
- Anchorage, AK
- Austin, TX
- Baltimore (unofficial)
- Bellingham, WA
- Boston
- Buffalo, NY (unofficial)
- Champaign/Urbana, IL
- Chicago (unofficial)
- Cincinnati (unofficial)
- Columbus
- Davis and Weber Counties, Utah
- Denver (unofficial)
- Houston
- System map (shows frequent network)
- Map showing frequent network only
- Indianapolis
- Los Angeles
- Madison
- Miami-Dade Country
- Minneapolis/St. Paul
- Montréal
- New York
- Orange County
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Phoenix, Arizona (Valley Metro)
- Portland, Oregon
- Providence, Rhode Island
- Richmond, Virginia
- Salt Lake County, Utah
- San Antonio
- San Francisco Bay Area
- Seattle
- seattletransitmap.com (unofficial)
- King County Metro official
- Salem, OR
- Spokane, WA
- Toronto
- Tucson, AZ (unofficial)
- Utah County, Utah
- Vancouver, British Columbia
- Washington, DC
Oceania
- Canberra, Australia:
- South Auckland, New Zealand
South America
United Kingdom
Contributing
Have a map to add? Use GitHub to open an issue or pull request.
Credits
Inspired by, and initial list copied from, BeyondDC’s list of all known American & Canadian frequent transit maps.
Contributors
License
List licensed under Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International
See also
- frequent-finder: A library for auto-generating frequent network maps for public transit systems, using GTFS data as input.