MetroCard
The MetroCard is a discontinued magnetic stripe card used for fare payment on transportation in the New York City area. It was a payment method for the New York City Subway, New York City Transit buses and MTA buses. The MetroCard was also accepted by several partner agencies: Nassau Inter-County Express, the PATH train system, the Roosevelt Island Tramway, AirTrain JFK, and Westchester County's Bee-Line Bus System.
The MetroCard was introduced in 1994 to enhance the technology of the transit system and eliminate the burden of carrying and collecting tokens. The MTA discontinued the use of tokens in the subway on May 3, 2003, and on buses on December 31, 2003.
The MetroCard was phased out at the end of 2025. It was replaced by OMNY, a contactless payment system where riders pay for their fare by waving or tapping credit or debit bank cards, smartphones, or MTA-issued smart cards. MetroCard distribution, sales and ability to add value or passes ended by December 31, 2025. Remaining kiosks and turnstile systems will continue to operate until they are discontinued, the exact date to be announced later in 2026. 7-day or 30-day Unlimited Ride passes must begin use by March 31, 2026 to get the full term of use.
The MetroCard was managed by a division of the MTA known as Revenue Control, MetroCard Sales, which was part of the Office of the Executive Vice President. The MetroCard Vending Machines are manufactured by Cubic Transportation Systems, Inc. As of early 2019, the direct costs of the MetroCard system had totaled $1.5 billion.
History and fares
The idea for a farecard with a magnetic strip for the MTA system was proposed in 1983. It was the "highest priority" for then-MTA Chairman Richard Ravitch. The card would replace the tokens that were, at the time, used to pay transit fares. This plan was generally supported by the public. In 1984, Ravitch's successor Bob Kiley said that he would try to create a system for the new farecards within the next four years. However, bureaucratic actions and disagreements delayed the rollout of the system. In March 1990, the MTA board voted to allocate funding for the magnetic fare collection system. Three months later, the New York state legislature voted to allow the MTA to proceed for its plans for the new system. By 1991, the token technology was becoming dated: almost all other transit systems were using magnetic farecards, which were found to be much cheaper than the token system. In July of that year, the MTA board approved the roll-out of the magnetic farecard system. The MTA opened a request for bids to furnish and operate the farecard system, and Cubic Transportation Systems offered the lowest bid at $100 million.On October 30, 1992, the installation of Automated Fare Collection turnstiles began. The farecard system was given the name MetroCard by April 1993. At the time, the first subway stations were supposed to receive MetroCard-compatible turnstiles before year's end, and buses were scheduled to be retrofitted with MetroCard collection equipment by late 1995. On June 1, 1993, MTA distributed 3,000 MetroCards in the first major test of the technology for the entire subway and bus systems. Less than a year later, on January 6, 1994, MetroCard-compatible turnstiles opened at Wall Street on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line and Whitehall Street–South Ferry on the BMT Broadway Line. All MetroCard turnstiles were installed by May 14, 1997, when the entire bus and subway system accepted MetroCard.
On September 28, 1995, buses on Staten Island started accepting MetroCard, and by the end of 1995, MetroCard was accepted on all New York City Transit buses.
Before 1997, the MetroCard design was blue with yellow lettering. These blue cards are now collector's items. On July 4, 1997, the first free transfers were made available between bus and subway at any location with MetroCard. This program was originally billed as MetroCard Gold. Card colors changed to the current blue lettering on goldenrod background. On January 1, 1998, bonus free rides were given for purchases of $15 or more. On July 4, six months later, 7-Day and 30-Day Unlimited Ride MetroCards were introduced, at $17 and $63, respectively. A 30-day Express Bus Plus MetroCard, allowing unlimited rides on express buses in addition to local buses and the subway, was also introduced at $120. The 1-Day Fun Pass was introduced on January 1, 1999, at a cost of $4. The debut of the MetroCard allowed the MTA to add bonus fare incentives, such as free bus transfers to other buses or subways. Half of the ridership increase between 1997 and 1999 was attributed to these incentives.
The first MetroCard Vending Machines were installed on January 25, 1999, in two stations, and by the end of 1999 347 MVMs were in service at 74 stations. Retail stores also sold MetroCards; at the peak of the MetroCard's usage, more than 3,000 stores sold the product. On April 13, 2003, tokens were no longer sold. Starting May 4, 2003, tokens were no longer accepted, except on buses. The following fare increases were implemented:Base fare increased from $1.50 to $2.001-Day Unlimited MetroCard fare increased from $4 to $77-Day Unlimited MetroCard fare increased from $17 to $2130-day Express Bus Plus was replaced with a 7-day Express Bus Plus card, which cost $33 each.30-Day Unlimited MetroCard fare increased from $63 to $70
- The bonus for pay-per-ride increased to 20% of the purchase amount for purchases of $10 or more
- Tokens would be phased out, but for the next two months they acted as $1.50 credit towards a $2 bus ride.
On April 1, 2007, MetroCard started to be accepted by the Westchester Bee-Line Bus System as all of its buses were now equipped with new fareboxes that could accept MetroCard.
On March 2, 2008, another set of fare increases was implemented:1-Day Unlimited fare increased by 50 cents, to $7.50.7-Day Unlimited fare increased by $1, to $25.14-Day Unlimited was introduced for $47.30-Day Unlimited increased by $5, to $81.
- The bonus for pay-per-ride decreased to 15% of the purchase amount for purchases of $7 or more.
- The base fare and single-ride ticket increased by 25 cents, to $2.25.1-Day Unlimited fare increased by 75 cents, to $8.25.7-Day Unlimited fare increased by $7, to $27.7-Day Express Bus Plus fare increased by $4, to $45.14-Day Unlimited fare increased by $4.50, to $51.50.30-Day Unlimited increased by $8, to $89.
- The minimum purchase for a pay-per-ride bonus rose to $8.
In 2012, the MTA allowed advertisements to be printed on the fronts of MetroCards. The backs of MetroCards had already been used for advertisements since 1995. This change meant that advertisers could remove the MTA logo from the fronts of MetroCards.
As a result of Hurricane Sandy in October 2012, three free transfers were offered on the MetroCard. The first was between the Q22, the Q35, and the at the Flatbush Avenue–Brooklyn College subway station. The second between the Q22, either the Q52 Limited or the Q53 Limited, and the at the Rockaway Boulevard station. Finally, a three-hour transfer window applied from transfers from any subway station to the Q22 or Q113 routes of MTA Bus, and then to the n31, n32, and n33 routes of NICE.
On December 19, 2012, the MTA voted for the following fare increases:Base fare and single-ride ticket increased by 25 cents, to $2.50.7-Day Unlimited MetroCard fare increased by $1, to $30.30-Day Unlimited MetroCard fare increased by $8, to $112.
- The bonus for a pay-per-ride MetroCard decreased from 7% to 5% but the cutoff for the bonus decreased from $10 to $5.
On March 22, 2015, the MTA voted for the following fare increases:Base Fare increased by 25 cents, to $2.75;Express Bus fare increased, to $6.50;7-Day Unlimited fare increased by $1, to $31;7-Day Express Bus Plus fare increased by $7.25, to $57.25;30-Day Unlimited increased by $4.50, to $116.50;Single Ride ticket increased by 50 cents, to $3.00; and:
- the bonus for a pay-per-ride MetroCard was increased to 11%.
- the bonus for a pay-per-ride MetroCard was reduced from 11% to 5%.
In mid-2018, city officials tentatively agreed to start a program in which they would provide half-fare MetroCards to almost 800,000 New York City residents living below the federal poverty line. The program would start in January 2019, and the New York City allocated $106 million in fiscal year 2019 to subsidize the half-fare MetroCards for at least six months. After uncertainty over whether the program would be implemented, the half-fare MetroCards were rolled out starting on January 4, 2019. Initially, the reduced-fare MetroCards would be rolled out to 30,000 residents, though another 130,000 New Yorkers receiving SNAP benefits would also be allowed to receive the half-fare MetroCards in April 2019. However, in the revised plan, only a portion of the originally projected 800,000 residents would be eligible for the reduced-fare cards.
On April 21, 2019, the following fare increases went into place:Express Bus fare increased by 25 cents, to $6.75;7-Day Unlimited fare increased by $1, to $33;7-Day Express Bus Plus fare increased by $2.50, to $62;30-Day Unlimited fare increased by $6, to $127; and
- the bonus for a pay-per-ride MetroCard was eliminated.
The MetroCard itself costs $1.
Attributes
The cards were made of polyester. They measured across and are in thickness. Each MetroCard had a chamfer or diagonal cutout at its top right corner, indicating which direction the MetroCard should have been oriented when it was swiped through a turnstile or inserted into a farebox machine. There was also a circular hole on the left side of the MetroCard; turnstiles and farebox machines used this hole to ensure that the card was being read correctly. During a swipe, the MetroCard was read, re-written to, then check-read to verify correct encoding.Over the MetroCard's lifetime, 3.2 billion cards were manufactured. many in the United Kingdom. They were then encoded with stored value at a facility in Maspeth, Queens. Each MetroCard is assigned a unique, permanent ten-digit serial number when it is manufactured. The value is stored magnetically on the card itself, while the card's transaction history was held centrally in the Automated Fare Collection Database. When a card was purchased and fares are loaded onto it, the MetroCard Vending Machine or station agent's computer stores the amount of the purchase onto the card and updates the database, identifying the card by its serial number. Whenever the card was swiped at a turnstile, the value of the card was read, the new value was written, the customer was let through, and then the central database was updated with the new transaction as soon as possible. Cards were not validated in real time against the database when swiped to pay the fare. The AFC Database was necessary to maintain transaction records to track a card if needed. It had actually been used to acquit criminal suspects by placing them away from the scene of a crime. The database also stored a list of MetroCards that have been invalidated for various reasons. Reasons include the MetroCard being lost, stolen, expired student, or an expired monthly card, and it distributed the list to turnstiles in order to deny access to a revoked card.
The older blue MetroCards were not capable of the many kinds of fare options that the gold ones offered. The format of the magnetic stripe used by the blue MetroCard offered very little other than the standard pay-per-swipe fare. Gold MetroCards allowed groups of people to ride together using a single pay-per-swipe MetroCard. The gold MetroCard kept track of the number of swipes at a location in order to allow those same number of people to transfer at a subsequent location, if applicable. The MetroCard system was designed to ensure backward compatibility, which allowed a smooth transition from the blue format to gold.
Cubic later used the proprietary MetroCard platform to create the Chicago Card and Tren Urbano's fare card, which are physically identical to the MetroCard except for the labeling.
Card types
SingleRide Ticket
The SingleRide Ticket was a piece of paper with a magnetic strip on the front, and with the date and time of purchase stamped on the back. They cost $3.25 for one subway or local bus ride, with one free transfer allowed between buses, issued by the bus operator upon request. SingleRide Tickets did not allow transfers between subways and buses. SingleRide tickets could only be purchased at MetroCard Vending Machines, which are usually located within subway stations, and expired two hours from time of purchase. Because of these limitations, SingleRide Tickets are not frequently used, having been used by only 3% of subway riders in 2009.Although the Pay-Per-Ride MetroCard was accepted on PATH, the regular SingleRide ticket was not. However, a PATH SingleRide ticket was available from MVMs in PATH stations for $3.00, valid for two hours and only on PATH. PATH also accepted 2-Trip PATH MetroCards, which cost $6.00 and were also valid only on PATH.
Pay-Per-Ride MetroCard
The Pay-Per-Ride MetroCard cost $1, and could be filled with an initial value in any increment between $5.80 and $80, though vending machines only sold values in multiples of 5 cents. Cards could be refilled in 1-cent increments at station booths, and in 5-cent increments at vending machines. A MetroCard holder could spend up to $80 in one transaction and up to a total value of $100. Pay-Per-Ride MetroCards could also be filled with unlimited ride time in 7- or 30-day increments. As of 2022, station booths no longer did any MetroCard transactions.The Pay-Per Ride MetroCard was accepted on the New York City Subway; MTA express, local, limited, and Select Bus Service buses; and the Staten Island Railway. Outside agencies also accept the MetroCard, including Nassau Inter-County Express; the PATH, operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey; the AirTrain JFK, operated by the Port Authority; the Roosevelt Island Tramway; and the Westchester County Bee-Line Bus System. However, PATH did not accept reduced-fare MetroCard.
Pay-Per-Ride MetroCards deducted different values depending on which service was used. Subway, Staten Island Railway, Roosevelt Island Tramway, or local/limited/Select bus uses, cost $2.90 per trip and usually allowed one valid transfer, though two transfers may be allowed depending on which routes are being used. Although the PATH charged $3.00 as well, it did not offer any free transfers. A ride on an MTA express bus cost $7.00, with transfers allowed to or from the subway, Staten Island Railway, or non-express MTA buses. The BxM4C Bee-Line Bus deducted $7.50 per trip, and no free or discounted transfers were allowed to or from that route. The AirTrain JFK cost $8.50 per trip if the passenger enters or leaves at Jamaica or Howard Beach–JFK Airport stations.
Transfers were available within two hours of initial entry, with the following structure:
- One free transfer from
- * subway to local bus
- * bus to subway
- * bus to local bus
- * express bus to express bus
- * bus or subway to Staten Island Railway
- * subway to subway between the Lexington Avenue–59th Street stations and the Lexington Avenue–63rd Street station or between Junius Street station and Livonia Avenue station
- Two consecutive free transfers are available with the MetroCard for certain transfers. The transfers must be made within two hours of each other.
- * Between Staten Island bus routes crossing the Staten Island Railway, through St. George Ferry Terminal, and then any MTA local bus or NYC subway service below Fulton Street in Lower Manhattan.
- * Between certain bus routes as specified in
- $4.10 for each local bus or subway to express bus transfer.
- Transfers with coins are good for use on one connecting local bus route.
- Customers transferring to suburban buses from another system with a lower base fare must pay the difference between the fare on the first bus and the fare on the second bus.
- No transfers to the BxM4C.
- No free transfer between PATH and NYC Subway, Bus and MTA Bus.
- Up to 4 people can ride together on a single Pay-Per-Ride MetroCard, with one free transfer granted.
EasyPayXPress MetroCard
The EasyPayXPress MetroCard functions like a pay per ride or unlimited MetroCard, but is automatically refilled from a linked credit or debit card. An EasyPayXpress account is opened with either $30 or a 30-day unlimited balance of $121., another $45 is automatically added for Pay-Per-Ride customers when balance drops below $20. To reduce this, a one-time payment may be made online before the balance drops below $20. All rules for standard pay per ride or unlimited cards apply, and EasyPay customers can review the account and ride usage online. Reduced-fare EasyPay version converts from Pay-Per-Ride to Unlimited rides once the value of fares used meet or exceed the cost of a reduced-fare 30-Day Unlimited Ride card. Express bus fares do not contribute, and EasyPay cannot be used on PATH trains. As of March 2025, the EasyPayXPress Metrocard has been discontinued in favor of the new OMNY System.AirTrain JFK Discount MetroCard
The AirTrain JFK Discount MetroCard offers ten trips on AirTrain JFK at $26.50. This card can only be purchased at specially marked MetroCard Vending Machines. It can be refilled, and once done so, becomes a Pay-Per-Ride MetroCard. However, although the AirTrain fare is also payable using a regular Pay-Per-Ride MetroCard, no discount is given for Pay-Per-Ride cards. There is also an unlimited-ride 30-day card that costs $40 and is only valid on AirTrain JFK.Unlimited MetroCard
, four types of Unlimited-ride MetroCards are sold:- 7-Day Unlimited Ride Card, $34 for unlimited subway and local bus rides until midnight on the seventh day following first usage.
- 30-Day Unlimited Ride Card, $132 for unlimited subway and local bus rides until midnight on the thirtieth day following first usage.
- 7-Day Express Bus Plus Card, $64 for unlimited express bus, local bus, and subway rides until midnight on the seventh day following first usage.
- 30-Day AirTrain JFK Unlimited Ride Card, $40 for unlimited trips on the AirTrain until midnight on the thirtieth day from first usage. This card can only be purchased at specially marked MetroCard Vending Machines at the Howard Beach–JFK Airport or Sutphin Boulevard–Archer Avenue–JFK Airport stations and at MetroCard vendors in JFK Airport. There are no transfer privileges with this card as it only works on the AirTrain. This is the only unlimited card accepted on the AirTrain.
Standard 7- and 30-day unlimited cards are accepted on MTA New York City Subway; non-express buses from either the MTA, NICE, or Bee-Line; the Roosevelt Island Tramway; and the Staten Island Railway. 7-Day Express Bus Plus is accepted on MTA express buses. The AirTrain JFK only accepts the Unlimited AirTrain JFK card.
Student MetroCard
The Student MetroCard was issued to New York City public and private school students who live within the city limits. It allowed free access to the NYCT buses and trains, depending on the distance traveled between their school and their home. The card program was managed by the NYCDOE Office of Pupil Transportation. In NYC, these cards were replaced by Student OMNY cards. In Nassau County, Student MetroCards are issued by individual schools which have pre-paid for the cards. In Westchester County, cards are also issued, but cost $58 per month, or $580 a school year.The DOE issued different colors of cards to students who live in New York City. Orange cards were given to students who are in grade K-6. Green cards were given to students who are in grades 7–12. Student MetroCards were allowed on the New York City Subway, non-express MTA buses, and the Staten Island Railway. Formerly, there was also a half-fare card that could only be used on non-express buses, discontinued in mid-2019. Red cards were issued to students and parents when there is a school bus work stoppage. Blue-and-purple cards are issued to Nassau County students and are only allowed to use the cards on NICE buses. Up to three trips per day may be made on student MetroCards, though four-trip MetroCards can be authorized individually for students who must make more than one transfer between home and school.
Students who received a student MetroCard must live:
- More than 0.5 miles away if they are in grades K–2
- More than 1.0 miles away if they are in grades 3–6
- More than 1.5 miles away if they are in grades 7–12
Disabled/Senior Citizen Reduced-Fare MetroCard
Senior citizen MetroCards are received via application or by submitting the application in person with required ID and copies of proof of age at the NYC Transit Customer Service Center at 3 Stone St in lower Manhattan and act as a combination photo ID and MetroCard. It allows half-fare within the MTA system, and on express buses during off-peak hours only. Half fare is also available on the 7-day and 30-day Unlimited MetroCards. "Autogate" cards are issued to persons with mobility impairments and are accepted at wheelchair doors at selected stations. The card back is color-coded to indicate the gender of the card holder, and the card face is marked with "Photo ID Pass". Later issues of Senior Citizen and Disability MetroCards are uncolored for gender neutral requests.Temporary replacement cards are purple with no photo, or blue for Autogate MetroCard holders, and the value cannot be refunded if the original card is stolen or lost. A Senior & Disabled Reduced-fare EasyPay card is also available.
This type of card is accepted everywhere the Pay-Per-Ride or time-based MetroCard is, with two exceptions: it is not valid on the PATH, and it is not valid for ticket purchase on New York City-bound LIRR and Metro-North trains in the morning. Reduced-Fare MetroCards are also not accepted at PATH stations. Reduced-fare customers who do not have a MetroCard may purchase a full-fare round trip MetroCard from a subway station agent by presenting proof of eligibility.
This type of card caused complaints because it took up to three months to replace.
The Reduced Fare MetroCard began to transition to the MTA's new payment system OMNY and phased out their service use with MetroCard in late 2024.
Fair Fares MetroCard
The Fair Fares MetroCard pilot program was implemented in January 2019. These are distributed by Fair Fares NYC, which sends letters to eligible residents that meet the income criteria, including veteran students, New York City Housing Authority residents, City University of New York students, and residents who receive benefits from the Department of Social Services. These residents must then register online to receive the Fair Fare MetroCard. Holders of the Fair Fare MetroCard can purchase Pay-Per-Ride or time-based fares at half the regular price. This type of card is accepted only on local/limited/Select buses, the subway, and the Staten Island Railway.The Department of Social Services and Human Resource Administration, who are responsible for the enrollments of the Fair Fares NYC customers, began issuing OMNY to select customers as part of a pilot program in mid-2024. New Fair Fares customers began receiving OMNY cards from February 2025 onward; existing customers could either switch to an OMNY card immediately or continue to use their MetroCard until it expired.
Emergency services
An emergency MetroCard is carried by police officers, firefighters, and emergency medical personnel while on duty so they can access the subway system during an emergency.Fares
MetroCard Bus Transfer
The MetroCard Bus Transfer is issued upon request to passengers who pay cash fares on buses accepting MetroCard. The transfer is inserted into the fare box on the second bus, which retains it. Westchester Bee Line bus system and Nassau Inter-County Express and New York City Transit bus">New York City Transit Authority">New York City Transit bus is free to transfer from one bus to another bus that is accepted with MetroCard. The bus transfer is paper like the SingleRide Metrocard. This transfer does not grant cash customers subway access.For suburban transfers, if the fare paid to get the transfer is less than that required on the second bus, the difference must be paid on boarding. For transfers from NICE to New York City Transit, no step up fee is required.
The predecessor to the MetroCard bus transfer was the original bus transfer. These paper tickets allowed bus to bus transfers. Available in pads of several different colors for use at different times, boroughs or directions, they would be torn at a certain time-marked line to indicate when the transfer would expire. A version of this still exists today as the "General Order Transfer" which is provided to customers as they leave the subway system during service disruptions to re-enter the system at another point.
Purchase options
All new MetroCard purchases were charged a $1 fee, except to reduced-fare customers and those exchanging damaged/expired cards. This purchase fee does not apply to MetroCard refills.Subway station booths
As of 2022, booths no longer handle any transactions, and station agents have been reassigned to other functions within the station. Prior to this booths staffed by MTA station agents are located in all MTA subway stations. Every type of MetroCard could be purchased at a booth, with the exception of the SingleRide ticket and MetroCards specific to other transit systems. All booth transactions had to be in cash.MetroCard vending machines
MetroCard Vending Machines are located in some in the Bronx, PATH stations, Staten Island Ferry terminals, Roosevelt Island Tramway stations, and, Eltingville Transit Center, and Terminals A and B at LaGuardia Airport.MVMs debuted on January 25, 1999, and are found in two models. Standard MVMs accept cash, credit cards, and debit cards, and are located in every subway station. Cash transactions are required for purchases of less than $1, and they can return up to $9 in coin change. MVMs can also reload previously issued MetroCards. MetroCard Express Machines are smaller MVMs that only accept credit and ATM/debit cards. Both models allow customers to purchase any type of MetroCard through a touchscreen. The machines also comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, through use of Braille and a headset jack: audible commands for each menu item are provided once a headset is connected and the proper sequence is keyed through the keypad; all non-visual commands are then entered via the keypad instead of the touchscreen. The MEMs and MVMs are geared to allow a maximum of 2 transactions per day when payment is made by either credit or debit card. PATH fare vending machines can dispense MetroCards. MetroCards that have expired can be exchanged using a MVM or MEM if done within one year of the expiration date printed on the back of the card. This is done by using the Refill option on the machine screen. Any cash value that is left on the expired card will be transferred to the new card. No fee is charged for a new MetroCard in this instance.
With the MetroCard being phased out, the vending machines were also removed from stations. In April 2025, the Court Square–23rd Street station, 21st Street–Queensbridge station, and Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue/74th Street station became the first three stations in the New York City Subway system to have all their MetroCard vending machines removed. As of December 2025, the last subway stations to have MetroCard Machines are Bedford Park Boulevard-Lehman College, Woodlawn, Pelham Bay Park, and Wakefield-241 Street.
MetroCard bus and van
A number of MetroCard sales vans and a MetroCard bus routinely travel to specific locations in New York City and Westchester County, stopping for a day at the announced locations. MetroCards can be purchased or refilled directly from these vehicles. Reduced-fare MetroCard applications can also be processed on the bus, including taking photographs for these cards.The MetroCard van serves all five boroughs and Westchester County, while the MetroCard bus serves Manhattan, the Bronx, Queens, and parts of Brooklyn.
Neighborhood MetroCard merchants
Vendors can apply to sell MTA fare media at their business. Only presealed, prevalued cards are available, and no fee is charged. A comprehensive listing of neighborhood MetroCard merchants can be found on the MTA website.Commuter railroad ticket vending machines
Ticket vending machines for the MTA's two commuter railroad systems, Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North Railroad, offer the option to purchase combined tickets/passes and MetroCards. A $5.50 MetroCard is available with a round-trip ticket, and a $50 MetroCard is available with a monthly pass. In addition, the machines sell separate $25 MetroCards. TVMs at Jamaica station and Penn Station sell AirTrain JFK monthly passes on the back of LIRR tickets. All cards sold from these machines are of thick paper stock, not the normal plastic. As of May 25, 2025 Ticket Vending Machines have stopped selling MetroCards.Beginning in 2007, with the start of the S89 bus service, a combined Hudson–Bergen Light Rail monthly pass and monthly MetroCard became available at NJ Transit ticket vending machines at HBLR stations.
Retirement
In 2006, the MTA and Port Authority announced plans to replace the magnetic strip with smart cards.On July 1, 2006, MTA launched a six-month pilot program to test the new contact-less smart card fare collection system, initially ending on December 31, 2006, but extended until May 31, 2007. This program was tested at all stations on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line and at four stations in the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens. The testing system utilized Citibank MasterCard's Paypass keytags. This smart card system was intended to ease congestion near the fare control area by reducing time spent paying for fare. MTA and other transportation authorities in the region said they would eventually implement it system-wide.
OMNY
In October 2017, MTA signed a $573 million contract with Cubic Transportation Systems for OMNY, a new fare payment system. This will use the contactless payment system, with riders waving or tapping credit or debit bank cards, smartphones, and/or MTA-issued smart cards to pay their fare. This contactless system was originally developed by Transport for London at a cost of £11 million, before being licensed to Cubic for worldwide sale. MTA expects to spend at least six years rolling out the system, with new electronic readers and vending machines. The new fare system would be rolled out on a limited basis in May 2019. It was intended that by 2024, the MetroCard would be phased out entirely, although this target has not been met.On March 19, 2025, the MTA announced that sales and distribution of the MetroCard would end on December 31, 2025. Customers will still be able to continue using their MetroCards until turnstiles and vending machines are disassembled at a later date. In late 2025, stores stopped selling MetroCards, and the MTA hosted several events, including parties, to mark the MetroCard's retirement. In addition, coinciding with the retirement, the New York Transit Museum hosted an exhibit commemorating the MetroCard in December 2025. In addition, announcements made by Katseye, Andy Cohen, Oscar the Grouch from Sesame Street, and Ronnie Chieng were made announcing the MetroCard's retirement. By that month, all except 16 MetroCard Vending Machines had been removed. The last day of MetroCard sales was December 31, 2025, commemorated by a mock funeral at Washington Square Park. After MetroCard sales ceased, old MetroCards were listed for sale on eBay, sometimes for thousands of dollars each.
Unauthorized resale and scams
The MetroCard system is susceptible to various types of unauthorized resale, colloquially known as "selling swipes".At times, this may involve individuals charging to swipe another commuter into the subway system at a discount below the official fare, either by using an "unlimited ride" MetroCard, or by manipulating a spent MetroCard to obtain an extra, unpaid ride. A 2004 press release from New York State Senator Martin J. Golden claims these behaviors cost the MTA $260,000 a year.
So-called 'swipers' reportedly may secure customers by maliciously damaging the coin and bill acceptor mechanisms of MetroCard vending machines. Nearly half of broken vending machines were in Manhattan, and the MTA spent $26.5 million on MVM repairs as of 2017. An 18-minute delay between uses of an "unlimited ride" MetroCard at any given station, and the expense of unlimited ride MetroCards, have historically limited their use for selling swipes.
More commonly, "swipers" use a technique which involves bending a spent MetroCard in a precise way that then allows a further use of that MetroCard when swiped and unkinked according to a specific procedure at a turnstile. Swipers employ this procedure to sell discount entry to the subway; some riders simply use the technique to garner free subway entry themselves. The bend purportedly damages the magnetic stripe on the MetroCard which indicates it no longer has value, prompting the turnstile reader to defer to a back-up field which indicates that the metrocard has one remaining fare. When the technique was discovered, it could be performed an unlimited number of times with the same MetroCard. However, a software correction soon limited the technique to just once per used MetroCard, in which a turnstile computer which had deferred to that "backup" field would require the MetroCard be swiped additional times through the reader/writer before granting entry so any lingering indication of value could be deleted from the card, making it impossible to manipulate a given MetroCard in the same way once again.
Criminal charges leveled against those using this bent-MetroCard technique have included petit larceny and, in a state law introduced specifically to target swipers in the year 2006, with "unauthorized sale of transportation services." As early as 2001, however, police and prosecutors began to charge people bending MetroCards to seek free rides with various forms of forgery.
While misdemeanor forgery charges have been used in a number of jurisdictions, the Manhattan District Attorney's Office championed felony forgery charges for those in possession of manipulated metrocards, including "criminal possession of a 'forged instrument' in the 2nd Degree", a felony. A representative of that office successfully defended the charge to the state's highest court, the New York State Court of Appeals, in a case decided in 2009. Critics have argued, however, that the court's decision is based on an incomplete—and possibly incorrect—understanding of MetroCard technology, calling to question the status of a bent metrocard as a "forged instrument". The MetroCard technology has no public documentation, and has never been made available to criminal defendants who might dispute claims that a simple bend to a MetroCard alters its data as read by a turnstile computer in the way claimed by Manhattan prosecutors. It is unclear, for example, why a bent MetroCard cannot be used to obtain an unpaid ride on a New York City bus if simply bending a MetroCard can actually alter how it is read by a subway turnstile computer as prosecutors claim. One researcher has argued that a bent MetroCard must be subject to further procedures in order to be seen by the turnstile computer as legitimate, which requires both concealing data from the turnstile computer with a bend, as well as having fresh data written to the MetroCard by the turnstile computer itself. Because a bent MetroCard will not actually appear legitimate to a turnstile computer without further steps to allow the turnstile computer to write that fresh data, this casts doubt on the claim that a bent MetroCard—often cited as evidence in the prosecutions of swipers—actually constitutes a "forged instrument" as defined in New York State law.
A $1 fee on new MetroCards imposed in 2013 significantly curtailed the bent-MetroCard form of selling swipes. The fee motivated riders to keep and refill their existing MetroCards, undermining the vast supply of discarded spent MetroCards from which swipers previously drew as their stock-in-trade. Nonetheless, people continue to sell swipes of bent MetroCards which have been discarded. Swipers continue to be prosecuted under forgery laws, according to research published in 2019.
The MetroCard has resisted digital duplication through software. The MetroCard has a magnetic stripe, but both the track offsets and the encoding differ from standard Magstripe cards. The card's data is in a proprietary format developed by the contractor Cubic. Off-the-shelf reader/writers for standard cards are useless to read from or write to MetroCards without mechanical modification and custom software. Self-identified hackers have had success decoding MetroCard data by treating MetroCard contents as sound, and converting its contents to binary using a computer sound card, inferring the role of data fields by comparing MetroCards with known properties, and developing custom Linux software to decode MetroCard data. Moreover, MetroCard data has been duplicated to other media, also by treating it as sound, using an eight-track tape player. While duplicates may be usable to enter the subway in the short term, they are likely to be invalidated after the AFC database discovers imbalance between fares purchased for a MetroCard with a certain serial number, and fares used from one or more MetroCards bearing that same serial number.
Limited editions
Over the years, the MTA has issued limited-edition MetroCards in honor of certain events, people, or structures. There were over 400 limited-issue designs issued throughout the MetroCard's history.Back side designs
For much of the MetroCard's history, images were printed only on the back side of MetroCards. These have included cards with the Statue of Liberty, the New York City bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics, a Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum exhibit, and the Circle Line ferry. Sporting events have also been commemorated, including the Subway Series, the 2014 Super Bowl, the 1994 New York Rangers Stanley Cup Finals victory, and the 2014–15 season of the Brooklyn Nets.In 2017, the MTA started issuing Supreme-branded MetroCards at eight subway stations. The Supreme-branded cards were popular, and there were reports that some were resold for hundreds of dollars. The MTA issued MetroCards featuring Mariska Hargitay, the main actor in the TV series Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, in 2024 to celebrate the show's 25th anniversary.
Front side designs
The MTA started allowing front side advertising on MetroCards in 2012. One of the earliest front side designs was an I Love New York card first sold in October 2013. 300,000 cards were printed in remembrance of Hurricane Sandy the previous year.Starting in December 2018, the MTA issued 250,000 Game of Thrones-themed MetroCards at Grand Central–42nd Street, in honor of the show's final season. The cards came in four designs. Starting in May 2019, coinciding with the opening of the Memorial Glade at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, the MTA issued 250,000 MetroCards with images of first responders at the World Trade Center site after the September 11 attacks. The MetroCards were issued at ten subway stations: six in Lower Manhattan and four high-traffic stations in Midtown Manhattan and Brooklyn. In June 2019, the MTA celebrated Stonewall 50 - WorldPride NYC 2019 with LGBT pride-themed MetroCards.
In November 2020, the MTA celebrated Veterans Day with Veterans Day themed MetroCards. The MetroCards were available at six stations: two in Brooklyn, one in Queens, two in Midtown Manhattan, and one in The Bronx. In 2023, the MTA issued special Cam'ron, LL Cool J, Rakim, and Pop Smoke MetroCards. In 2024, the MTA issued Ice Spice MetroCards to celebrate the launch of Ice Spice's first album. That May, the MTA announced that two final front-side MetroCard designs would be issued, as the MTA was in the process of retiring the MetroCard itself. The second-to-last commemorative card was themed to Olivia Rodrigo and was sold starting in October 2024. The last promotional Metrocard, collaborating with Instagram, features social media stars "New York Nico", "SubwayTakes" and "Overheard NY" were sold starting on December 9, 2024.