Records tumble as public transport patronage surges
Long-standing records were broken last financial year as more Western Australians made public transport a part of their regular travel pattern.
More than 144.2 million train, bus and ferry boardings were recorded in 2023-24, a 17 per cent increase on the previous year and the best boardings total in almost a decade, falling just short of 2015-16's 145.6 million.
Buses continued to be the most popular mode of public transport with 83.6 million boardings - the best since 2014-15 (84.1 million) - while ferries recorded their best year ever with more than 871,000 boardings, a 16.5 per cent increase on the previous record of 747,881 in 2016-17.
Trains also had a big year, notching 59.7 million boardings - the best since 2018-19 (61.5 million). All lines, except the partially-closed Armadale Line, experienced significant growth in patronage numbers when compared to the previous 12 months.
This includes:
- Airport Line: 69.3 per cent increase on 2022-23;
- Fremantle Line: 10.3 per cent increase;
- Mandurah Line: 23.8 per cent increase (record total patronage of 21.88 million);
- Midland Line: 10.2 per cent increase; and
- Joondalup Line (now Yanchep Line): 14.9 per cent increase.
As patronage climbs, so does customer satisfaction, with about 90 per cent of passengers reporting very high satisfaction levels across all modes of public transport.
Thousands of passengers were surveyed in Transperth's annual Passenger Satisfaction Monitor (PSM), an independent survey of regular public transport users that covers all elements of their travel experience.
Now in its 35th year, the PSM is the most comprehensive and longest-running benchmarking survey of its kind in Australia, conducting more than 43,00 face-to-face interviews during a four-week period in the first half of the year.
Satisfaction levels across all modes remains high, with 9 in 10 respondents expressing their satisfaction with Transperth services, including 97 per cent of CAT bus users and 99 per cent of ferry users.
Off the back of the ongoing hard work of the Public Transport Authority's more than 390 transit officers, perception of safety among train passengers also reached record levels this year.
Ninety-nine per cent of all train passengers said they felt safe on board a train during the day and 82 per cent responded similarly for night services, the best outcome since 2019.
Train station safety also received a record 80 per cent satisfaction rating at night and held steady at 98 per cent for perceptions of safety during the day for the sixth year in a row.