Cincinnati Metro Fares: Ticket Prices, Passes, and Payment Options
Cincinnati Metro — operated by the Southwest Ohio Regional Transit Authority (SORTA) — structures its fare system around single-ride cash payments, reloadable tap cards, employer-issued passes, and reduced-fare programs for eligible riders. Understanding the full range of options helps riders select the most cost-effective payment method for their travel patterns. This page covers base fare amounts, pass types, accepted payment methods, and the eligibility boundaries that determine which fare category applies.
Definition and Scope
A transit fare is the monetary charge collected in exchange for a single trip or a defined period of unlimited travel on the Cincinnati Metro bus network. Fares apply to all fixed-route service, including local routes, express routes, and Night Owl Service. Paratransit service through Access operates under a separate fare schedule governed by ADA requirements (49 C.F.R. Part 37) and is not interchangeable with fixed-route fares.
The scope of the fare system includes:
- Base cash fare — collected at the farebox upon boarding
- Tap Card balance — stored value loaded onto the Cincinnati Metro Tap Card
- Time-based passes — daily, weekly, and monthly unlimited-ride products
- Reduced-fare products — discounted rates for qualifying seniors, persons with disabilities, and Medicare cardholders
- Employer and institutional passes — bulk or subsidized programs including the Go Pass
Fares are set by the SORTA Board of Trustees (Cincinnati Metro Board of Trustees) and are subject to revision through a formal public process. For the current adopted fare schedule, the authoritative source is the Southwest Ohio Regional Transit Authority.
How It Works
Payment at the Farebox
Riders boarding a Cincinnati Metro bus pay the base fare upon entry. The farebox accepts exact cash only — drivers do not make change. The Tap Card can be tapped on the farebox reader to deduct the applicable fare from stored value or activate a loaded pass. Riders who board at the Cincinnati Metro Hub Terminal or other transit centers follow the same pay-on-board process.
Tap Card and Stored Value
The Tap Card functions as both a stored-value account and a pass holder. A rider loads a dollar balance, and each tap deducts the single-ride fare. Alternatively, a 7-day or 31-day pass can be loaded onto the card, enabling unlimited rides for the pass period. The card itself carries a one-time issuance fee. Transfers are governed by the Cincinnati Metro Transfer Policy; a timed transfer window means a second boarding within the window does not trigger a second full fare deduction.
Pass Activation and Duration
- A daily pass activates on the first tap and expires at the end of that calendar service day.
- A 7-day pass activates on first use and provides unlimited rides for 7 consecutive days.
- A 31-day pass activates on first use and covers 31 consecutive days of unlimited travel on all fixed routes.
Reduced Fare Verification
Riders seeking a reduced fare must present valid documentation — such as a Medicare card, a SORTA-issued reduced fare ID, or proof of qualifying disability — before or during boarding. The Cincinnati Metro Reduced Fare Program page details eligibility criteria and the application process. The reduced base fare is set at approximately half the standard adult cash fare, consistent with the ADA mandate at 49 C.F.R. § 37.121 that transit agencies charge no more than half the base fare to ADA-eligible paratransit riders during off-peak hours (a parallel framework informs fixed-route discount structuring).
Common Scenarios
Occasional Rider (1–4 trips per week): Cash or Tap Card stored value is typically most practical. Loading $10–$20 in stored value avoids the need to carry exact change while still paying per-trip.
Daily Commuter (10+ trips per week): A 31-day unlimited pass delivers the highest per-trip savings. A rider taking 2 trips per day on 20 workdays makes 40 trips; if the single-ride fare is $1.75, that totals $70 in per-ride cost against a monthly pass priced below that threshold.
Employer-Sponsored Rider: Employers enrolled in the Go Pass program subsidize or fully cover employee transit costs. Riders in this program board using an employer-issued credential rather than paying at the farebox individually.
Senior or Disabled Rider: Qualifying riders pay a reduced fare. Those uncertain about eligibility can review program details at the Cincinnati Metro Reduced Fare Program page or consult accessibility resources.
Park-and-Ride User: Riders using park-and-ride facilities to connect to express service pay the standard or reduced fare upon boarding — parking itself does not carry an additional Metro fare charge.
Decision Boundaries
Selecting the right fare product depends on trip frequency, eligibility status, and payment preference. The structured comparison below captures the primary distinctions:
| Product | Best For | Pass Duration | Savings Threshold |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cash / Stored Value | Occasional riders | Per trip | N/A |
| 7-Day Unlimited Pass | Weekly commuters | 7 consecutive days | Breaks even at roughly 5 round trips |
| 31-Day Unlimited Pass | Daily commuters | 31 consecutive days | Breaks even at roughly 20 round trips |
| Reduced Fare | Qualifying seniors/disabled riders | Per trip or pass | ~50% discount vs. adult fare |
| Go Pass | Employer-enrolled workers | Varies by employer contract | Employer-subsidized |
Riders who miss the fare payment window — boarding without valid payment — are subject to fare evasion enforcement under Metro's Rider Code of Conduct. The Cincinnati Metro home resource index provides a navigational entry point to fare tools, route maps, schedules, and real-time tracking.
References
- Southwest Ohio Regional Transit Authority (SORTA) — Fares & Passes
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations — 49 C.F.R. Part 37 (Transportation for Individuals with Disabilities)
- Federal Transit Administration — Fare Policy Guidance
- Cincinnati Metro (Go-Metro.com) Official Site