Get Issuer Alerts
Add this issuer to your watchlist to get alerts about important updates.
Metro General Manager’s proposed budget calls for improved rail and bus service with no fare increase
View allDecember 11, 2025
Metro’s General Manager and Chief Executive Officer presented the proposed budget for the next fiscal year, July 2026 to June 2027, to the WMATA Board of Directors on Thursday. The budget focuses on bus and rail improvements to increase ridership and revenue without raising fares while continuing to identify cost saving opportunities.
The service plan calls for shorter weekday wait times on the Orange, Silver, and Blue lines, and reduced wait times on the Red Line at night. Additionally, bus service would increase on 15% of routes across the region.
“Metro ridership has grown in recent years, and we want to continue to meet that demand for the region,” said Metro General Manager and CEO Randy Clarke. “This proposal reflects our commitment to delivering safe, frequent, and reliable service, while preparing Metro for the potential long-term capital challenges ahead.”
Overall, the proposal will make bus and rail operations more efficient through schedule optimization and by adding capacity to address emerging crowding while improving reliability.
For the first time, the budget proposal includes a multi-year budget and service plan forecast to foster better planning and predictability for Metro and our regional partners.
Bus proposals
Bus improvements include shorter wait times on nine high ridership routes, route enhancements on five routes, longer hours of service on four routes, and the potential for two new limited-stop routes in Northern Virginia.
Rail proposals
Rail would have better all-day and late-night service with trains running every 3-6 minutes in the core and 6-10 minutes in others parts of the system on weekdays. After 9:30 p.m., trains would run every 4-8 minutes in the core.
Overall, the proposal calls for 6% more daily train trips on weekdays.
Specific increases include:
-
Orange, Silver, and Blue line trains would run every 10 minutes on weekdays, an improvement on the current 12-minute service .
-
Red Line trains would run every 7 to 8 minutes after 9:30 p.m., an improvement from the current 10-minute service.
Capital Program proposal
Metro is proposing two scenarios for its six-year Capital Improvement Program outlook:
-
One scenario is significantly constrained and assumes no new regional DMVMoves investment. Under this scenario, Metro will reduce capitol spending and defer projects that will lead to declining reliability, worsening customer experience, and increased safety risk over time.
-
The other scenario includes the additional $460 million regional investment called for in the regional DMVMoves endorsement. DMVMoves calls for Metro to modernize its bus and rail system. Part of the improvements would address and update the rail signaling system, ensure bus reliability, and make Metro safer and more cost efficient.
Next steps
Metro will hold in-person and virtual public hearings in February.
The in-person hearing will be Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026, at 6 p.m. at the Arlington County Board Room, 2100 Clarendon Blvd, Suite 307, Arlington VA 22201. An informational open house will be available 5:30-6 p.m.
Two virtual (video conference or phone call-in) hearings will be Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026, at 12 p.m. and Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026, at 6 p.m.
Check wmata.com/budget in the coming weeks for FAQs and updates on the launch of the online public comment period.
The WMATA Board of Directors approves the final budget in April 2026.
The new budget year starts July 1, 2026, and runs through June 30, 2027.
