Three cities in France now offer free public transport all week long, and a fourth - Clermont-Ferrand - could be set to join them, as more authorities aim to promote eco-friendly policies.
The three cities with free public transport all week long so far are:
Mayor of Montpellier, Michaël Delafosse, travelled to Dunkirk (see below), and Tallinn in Estonia (also below), to study other successful systems, and figure out how to bring them to his city.
The scheme was a campaign promise made by then-campaigning mayor Patrice Vergriete when he ran (successfully) for election in the city in 2014.
Mr Vergiete, who is also a town planner, is now junior transport minister under outgoing Prime Minister Gabriel Attal. As mayor of Dunkirk, he said he wanted to introduce “a radical measure on a massive scaleâ€, with 200,000 residents affected, of which 90,000 live close to the centre.
The scheme came amid massive investment (€65 million over two years) in the city’s centre, and a new fleet of buses.
Its success was immediate and has had a lasting impact. Bus passenger numbers rose by 50% in the first week after the scheme was introduced, and is now up 130%, five years later. In 2022, the city’s 16 bus routes covered a total of 644 kilometres, and carried 20.5 million passengers.
Niort
Niort busesRVillalon / Shutterstock
The Deux-Sèvres (Nouvelle-Aquitaine) city was the first in France to introduce free bus travel on urban and suburban routes, in a bid to reduce car use and boost public transport’s local image. It introduced the scheme on September 1, 2017.
Niort’s Tanlib network now has 10 urban routes, two shuttle routes in the city centre, seven suburban routes, six regional routes and 187 school routes.
It appears to have been a success. Passenger numbers have increased significantly in the communes of the Niort Agglo, which have a population of 120,000. Mairie figures show a 30% increase in the number of users and record passenger numbers last year, with more than six million journeys.
It also said that many car drivers have switched to using the buses; 85% of new bus users had previously travelled by car in the city before 2017. The free travel scheme prompted half the population to think about their travel habits, and 30% to change them, the mairie says.
Niort now faces the challenge of how to continue the scheme, especially as the city’s population increases and the number of students is expected to reach 5,000 by 2030.
Will Clermont-Ferrand be next?
A tram in Clermont-FerrandEBASCOL/Shutterstock
Since December 4, 2021, all residents of the Clermont-Ferrand metropolitan area have been able to use public transport for free on weekends.
But now, mayor Olivier Bianchi, has said that he is “not opposed in principle†to the idea of making the city’s transport network free during the week too.
“We need to find €15 million a year,†he said to on September 2, adding that the scheme would be “at the heart of the next municipal campaign†in 2026.
Clermont-Ferrand is not the only city to offer free public transport for weekend journeys; Nantes (Loire-Atlantique, Pays de la Loire) also does this, since introducing its own scheme on April 24, 2021.
At the weekend, all passengers can travel for free, regardless of residence location or age.
Ahead of introducing the measure, Nantes mayor Johanna Rolland : “This is both a measure to improve the purchasing power of residents and users of public transport, and a concrete response to the challenges of the ecological transition.â€
Other European cities with free public transport
A tram in the centre of TallinnLeonid Andronov/Shutterstock
France is not the only country whose cities are turning towards the idea.
In January 2013, the capital of Estonia became the first major city in the world to make all transport free, for the benefit of its 450,000 residents. Any resident with a valid transport card is now free to use the 789 kilometres of bus, trolley-bus and tram lines that crisscross the city and its surroundings.
Here, the scheme was primarily motivated by the Baltic economic crisis of 2008-2009, and was a way for the government to offer a boost to residents’ falling purchasing power.
After three years of feasibility studies, the proposal was put to a referendum, and 75% of participants voted in favour. The city has been seen as a pioneer, and has been studied by other city leaders as an example of how to successfully implement a free transport scheme.
Luxembourg
A Luxembourg tram4kclips/Shutterstock
The tiny country became the first in Europe to make all public transport completely free nationwide (for residents and tourists) in March 2020. It applies to buses, trams, trains and all funicular railways.
The only exceptions are the ‘call a bus’ on-demand service for users over the age of 70, and first class carriages on trains.
The country introduced the scheme for environmental reasons, to tempt people away from private cars. In 2020, the country had the highest car density in the European Union, with 696 cars per 1,000 inhabitants, compared with an average of 560 in the rest of Europe.
The country trialled the scheme for a few months for people under the age of 20, and students. After having been launched in what would become the start of the Covid pandemic, it initially faltered, as people did not want to take public transport and began to work at home. It is now recovering.