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Urban public transit, February 2026

Released: 2026-04-21

Highlights

In February, Canada's urban transit ridership stood at 121.0 million passenger trips, down slightly (-0.8%) from February 2025.

Data on total passenger trips and operating revenue for selected urban transit agencies are available in table 23-10-0307-01.

Ridership stalls

Canada's urban transit agencies provided an estimated 121.0 million passenger trips in February, down slightly (-0.8%; -1.0 million trips) from February 2025. This marked the 10th consecutive month of year-over-year decline.

On a monthly basis, with fewer calendar days in February, transit ridership typically dips from January. February 2026 saw a decline of 2.7%, or 3.4 million trips, from the previous month.

Revenue unchanged year over year

In February, transit agency operating revenue (excluding subsidies) totalled $305.2 million. This revenue was essentially unchanged (-0.03%) from February 2025.

Chart 1  Chart 1: Urban public transit operating revenue and passenger trips, monthly, 2019 to 2026
Urban public transit operating revenue and passenger trips, monthly, 2019 to 2026

  Note to readers

The table 23-10-0307-01—Passenger bus and urban transit statistics, by Urban transit agency—includes operating revenue and ridership at the city level for selected transit agencies. Statistics Canada appreciates the cooperation of these transit agencies in making this information available to Canadians.

Survey data are revised on a monthly basis to reflect new and updated information.

The data in this release are not seasonally adjusted.

This survey collects data on operating revenue (excluding subsidies) and the number of passenger trips from a panel of urban transit companies that represents at least 75% of revenue in each province and territory. Note that the panel is adjusted annually to maintain the 75% coverage and could differ slightly from what it was in the same month the previous year.

One-time payments from secondary and post-secondary institutions for academic-year student passes are typically reported as revenue during the early fall and early winter months.

Data prior to January 2017 can be found in table 23-10-0078-01.

Random tabular adjustment

The random tabular adjustment (RTA) technique, which aims to increase the amount of data made available to users while protecting the confidentiality of respondents, was applied to the totals of the Monthly Passenger Bus and Urban Transit Survey.

Using RTA, Statistics Canada identifies sensitive data and randomly adjusts values rather than suppressing them. The size of the adjustment is calculated to protect respondent confidentiality.

The Transportation Data and Information Hub, featuring data from Statistics Canada, Transport Canada and partners, provides Canadians with online access to comprehensive statistics and indicators for the country's transportation sector.

Contact information

For more information, or to enquire about the concepts, methods or data quality of this release, contact us (toll-free 1-800-263-1136; 514-283-8300; infostats@statcan.gc.ca) or Media Relations (statcan.mediahotline-ligneinfomedias.statcan@statcan.gc.ca).

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