Article Highlights

Key Takeaway:

Seattle’s Sound Transit considers implementing gates for its light-rail service to thwart fare evasion; consultant predicts ROI within three years.

Key Data:

• Document: Faregate Assessment Report, WSP, June 2026

• Document: Board presentation, June 2026

Organizations Mentioned:

• Sound Transit
• WSP
• Cambridge Systematics
• INIT
• BART (San Francisco)
• STraffic
• Cubic
• Conduent
• LA Metro (Los Angeles)
• WMATA (Wash., D.C.)
• MTA (New York)
• SEPTA (Philadelphia)
• NJ Transit (New Jersey)
• Paris Métro

Seattle-based Sound Transit is moving closer to giving the greenlight to installing fare gates at some of its busiest light-rail stations, at an estimated cost of up to $88.2 million, to deal with stubbornly low fare compliance.

The project would install 180 fare gates at 14 busy stations out of nearly 40 stations of the agency’s two-line light-rail network, Link. Sound Transit hired consultant WSP to produce a fare-gate assessment report, which paints a rosy picture on likely return on investment for the project. (Download the report below.)

Subscription Required

This premium content is only available to subscribers

Article has about1893words.

To keep reading, subscribe today

Get access to premium content from the only global publication devoted exclusively to mobility payments by subscribing today to the most authoritative source for news and analysis in the industry.

Already a member? Log in here