Skip to main content

NJ Transit links with Uber and Lyft

Access Link Riders’ Choice Pilot Program will see ride-hail used for paratransit
By Adam Hill May 25, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Using Uber or Lyft for paratransit will be 'based upon the best available scheduling option' (© Jonathan Weiss | Dreamstime.com)

NJ Transit is piloting ride-hail on its paratransit service Access Link.

The New Jersey transportation agency is allowing users to opt in - on a voluntary basis - to taking trips with Uber and Lyft "to reduce wait and trip times while maintaining Access Link prices and the reservation process to which customers are accustomed".

The Access Link Riders’ Choice Pilot Program will improve the service's reliability "while offering additional transportation options to customers of this crucial service", says New Jersey DoT commissioner and NJ Transit board chair Diane Gutierrez-Scaccetti.

Before scheduling a trip, riders must update their profile to indicate which ride-share service they want to use - or whether they have no preference.

They will not need to use the Uber or Lyft apps or contact either company directly, and the decision to send a ride-hail vehicle will be "based upon the best available scheduling option".

"NJ Transit strives to provide efficient and reliable transportation services to all of our customers, particularly those who are the most vulnerable,” Gutierrez-Scaccetti adds.

NJ Transit is the US's largest state-wide public transportation system providing more than 925,000 weekday trips on 253 bus routes, three light rail lines and 12 commuter rail lines, as well as Access Link.

Zach Greenberger, chief business officer at Lyft, says: “Through similar partnerships across the US, we have seen riders benefit from decreased wait times, improved reliability and convenience, which ensures they can get to and from work, school, appointments, and other activities.”

Customers who do not opt in will continue to have all of their trips serviced by the current Access Link providers but NJ Transit believes that the new scheme will improve on-time performance and productivity, decrease missed trips and also improve retention of Access Link drivers.

The pilot runs in Regions 2 and 5, which include Essex, Morris, Union, Somerset, Burlington, Camden, Gloucester and Salem counties and parts of Cumberland County and may expand to additional counties statewide.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Los Angeles pilots new travel planning app
    January 27, 2016
    The City of Los Angeles is piloting a new transportation app in partnership with Xerox in an effort to provide travellers with optimised transportation choices to simplify urban mobility in the second largest metro area in the US. The Go LA app aggregates and calculates the time, cost, carbon footprint and health benefits from walking, cycling, driving your own car, parking, taking public transit, as well the emerging private transportation options, such as Lyft, Zipcar, FlitWays and Uber, giving users a
  • New York expands ticketing via Transit
    March 8, 2021
    Nassau Inter-Country Express says Transit app will help multimodal ridership
  • Road ahead for infrastructure investment
    December 9, 2021
    Find out what’s in store for state DOTs as they plan their future investments in projects ranging from roads to rail to transit to ferries. Start your Friday morning off from 09:30 to 10:45 in East Wing E217, with the State DOT Roundtable. This annual executive level session will focus on the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). There will be two roundtable panels: the first will address policy issues while the second will focus on implementation.
  • Is fare-free transit taking us for a ride?
    August 11, 2022
    More cities around the world are trialling fare-free public transit schemes. Do they work and are they sustainable? Andrew Stone puts absolutely no money on his travelcard and jumps on board