Skip to main content

Luxembourg offers free public transit to cut congestion

Public transport in Luxembourg is now free as the tiny European state bids to cut congestion.
By Ben Spencer March 3, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Luxembourg: no need to pay for a ticket any more (Source: © Himeiji | Dreamstime.com)

The government is allowing people to use trains, trams and buses without paying in a bid to reduce traffic jams – and says this will also help people in low-paid jobs.

Transport minister Francois Bausch told Reuters: “For people with low incomes or the minimum wage, for them it’s really substantial. The main reason is to have a better quality of mobility, and then the side reason is clearly also environmental issues.”

Making travel free means commuters save €440 a month on an annual pass on all standard-class journeys on public transport. They can can still purchase a first-class pass at €660 a year.

Congestion in Luxembourg is increased each day by 214,000 drivers travelling into the area from neighbouring Germany, Belgium and France for work. More than half of Luxembourg's greenhouse gas emissions come from transport.

Measures are already being taken to reduce traffic jams. Last September, software company HaCon started working with the Luxembourg Transport Community to introduce a Mobility as a Service app.

In May 2018, Estonia also announced plans to make public transport free for the whole country five years on from a successful implementation in the capital city Tallinn.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • MaaS Global buys Brazil's Quicko
    April 6, 2022
    Whim app firm says LatAm country can 'hop over' car ownership and go straight to MaaS
  • IBTTA boss Kathryn Clay leaves after four months
    April 29, 2025
    Surprise decision was 'mutually agreed' with tolling organisation's board
  • MaaS by any other name
    February 6, 2020
    Has the roll-out of Mobility as a Service stalled - or could it just be that multimodal travel is simply happening under a variety of different names?
  • C40 mayors make global ‘clean air’ pledge
    October 11, 2019
    In a move that will have significant implications for urban transit, 35 mayors at this week’s C40 World Mayors Summit in Copenhagen have pledged to “implement substantive clean air policies by 2025”. Among other developments, this is likely to mean further increases in low- or zero-carbon public transport and zero-emissions zones, along with enhanced incentives and infrastructure to support walking and cycling, in cities worldwide. Signing the C40 Clean Air Cities Declaration, the mayors signalled their