Bus fares to stay at £2 in Manchester, Burnham says

1 month ago 16
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BBC A yellow double-decker bus at a bus stop which reads 'Bee Network' on the side. BBC

Greater Manchester's buses are set to be returned to public control under the Bee Network branding

Single fares on Greater Manchester's bus network will remain capped at £2 into 2025 despite a nationwide rise, the city region's mayor Andy Burnham has confirmed.

Prime Minister Sir Kier Starmer has announced England's single bus fare cap would be hiked to £3 in the upcoming Budget.

But Burnham said fares in the region would remain at the current rate "for the whole of 2025 but subject to a mid-year review".

The mayor made the announcement as part of a local fare restructure, which forms part of an ongoing plan to bring all of Greater Manchester's buses back under public control under the Bee Network branding.

Burnham said: "We will proceed with our plan to introduce a new simpler, flatter fare structure based around a £2 single fare.

"This said, it is only by the middle of 2025 when we have completed phase 1 of the Bee Network, and we know the level of government funding we have, that we will be in a position to judge the financial outlook for the new system."

A London-style contactless payment system with daily and weekly payment caps would be introduced in March, the mayor said.

London's buses would also be exempt from the fare cap increase.


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