What you liked reading about in 2025
Notwithstanding that the most read item in 2025 was my Sydney versus Melbourne comparison on who has the better transport. Sydney had been way ahead. The Metro Tunnel will give Melbourne a lift but we're nowhere near to matching Sydney until we boost frequencies across all modes.
As for the Metro Tunnel's benefits, two items from 2024 were highly read in 2025. These looked at whether the Metro Tunnel benefited service at our busiest stations and Metro Tunnel benefits for your line. An October 2025 item, setting out what's happening when for the Metro Tunnel was also popular.
Another popular theme was the frequent network. Here I take an integrated approach describing it as a 'thing'. This is a different approach to the current emphasis on major projects with frequency merely being a welcome (but sometimes undersold) by-product that happens if they are feeling generous. The three popular items here are (unsurprisingly) the main landing page for the network frequency maps I maintain, a more visionary item on a future frequent network and a look at why frequency is critical to increasing public transport's currently slow door to door speeds.
Boosting frequency costs money if extra service kilometres need to be added. But there are cases where you can get effective service boosts by simplifying and reforming bus networks. A 2020 item on how Perth reforms buses at a faster rate than Melbourne remained popular last year.
Rounding off the most popular reads was my 2024 look at the executives who run DTP. I attribute some of that to bureaucrats reading about themselves (or their bosses). If you liked that item you'll also want to read my 2025 follow-up here as there have been some changes.
Reflections on 2025
There were three major development in 2025. Let's go through them.
New infrastructure opened
2025 was the year in which two transport mega projects opened to the public - one road and the other rail. I'm talking about the West Gate Tunnel and Metro Tunnel with videos on the latter here.
Did the new rail infrastructure lead to service increases as was used as justification for these projects getting funding? We don't completely know yet but, with the 'Big Switch' for the Metro Tunnel in one month today we should know in a couple of weeks. More about the future later.
Setback for transport's biggest project.. but there's hope
2025 was a year in which key events and when we knew about them do not always happen in sequence. Appreciation of the order in which things happen is essential to form correct conclusions. Noting that governments have significant scope to withhold or at least delay information.
Such a fate befell what I would regard as Melbourne's biggest transport project (as measured by number of trips generated and geographical coverage). Comprehensive bus reform has potential to generate about 80 million annual trips, making projects like North East Link, West Gate Tunnel and SRL East look small in comparison.
Labor was returned with a big majority in the 2022 election. Nothing more was heard about the bus network reviews. The May 2023 state budget spent more on free car registration for apprentice tradies than on new bus initiatives.
The above was previously known but doesn't tell the full story. In 2025 we got to know more thanks to a tabling in parliament of internal DTP bus planning documents following a motion from Trung Luu MLC. The motion was passed in March 2024.
It apparently took 18 months for the department to find and collate the relevant papers for tabling in September 2025. Some documents were partly or entirely Cabinet in Confidence so we don't know everything. Nearly 2000 pages were arranged in three stacks of documents, depending on whether the public could see all of them, parts only or none of them (the latter being Cabinet documents).
From that I pieced together a chronology of significant developments in bus reform that you can see below (click for a better view).
Key elements included what was called B1 corridors - bus rapid transit corridors running every 5 - 10 minutes. Adding these fast routes would vastly multiply the number of connection points, making for a more versatile network, especially for cross-suburban travel.
The next layer down was B2 connector bus routes operating every 10 minutes along a main road grid spaced about 1.6km apart. Most people would be within walking distance of at least one of these faster and more direct routes.
Both BRT and connector routes would be rolled out over a staged program extending to 2030. New networks in pilot areas in Melbourne's north and north-east would have commenced in early 2025.
If implemented this revamped bus network would be easily Melbourne's biggest transport project based on its likely usage and 4 million-plus geographical coverage. It would make the much debated airport rail, with its two added train stations, look small. My analysis on the tabled documents led to several media appearances, summarised here.
We may have to wait years until we know Cabinet's reason for not proceeding with large-scale bus network reform as proposed and promised. It could be a wariness of political risk, a lack of funding or thinking that a complex reform takes a long time to do and a different approach could enable roll-out of a more limited set of upgrades before the 2026 election.
However what is known is that not all Cabinet ministers are alive to the potential of improved buses as part of a multimodal public transport network. SRL Minister Harriet Shing's dismissive comment about 'buses not solving any problems whatsoever' in a recent Dunn Street Socially Democratic interview may authentically reflect thinking not uncommon in this government.
While ambitious bus reform was off the agenda, the government tried to keep up appearances. For example every small change to a bus route or timetable was described as being part of the Bus Plan. Most were good but one or two were not, such as the revised complicated 513/514 timetables that replaced the promised but even sillier Greensborough FlexiRide.
Thus both can be accepted as correct in 2025:
(i) the state government abandoned promised large-scale bus reform as envisaged in the Bus Plan, and (ii) state government interest in bus service upgrades as demonstrated by the budget for new initiatives was significantly higher in 2025 than it was in the previous two state budgets.
Also happening in 2025 on the bus scene was continued progress on electrification with new operator contracts that made big companies bigger while squeezing out small operators, especially in northern suburbs.
The rise of community bus service campaigns
Fix800Bus emerged on the other side of Melbourne just before the 2022 state election. That election was not particularly prominent for public transport services with the agenda a mix of big infrastructure (Labor) and crime (Coalition). Labor had its then vague bus plan, Greens had an equally vague bus electrification plan while the Liberals were more specific but did not strongly market the policy.
So neither campaign got much out of the 2022 campaign that saw Labor win with a large majority. However the resignation of premier Daniel Andrews and treasurer Tim Pallas led to by-elections in Mulgrave (2023) and Werribee (2025). Both campaigns made good use of these by-elections, winning an increased profile and being taken seriously by the state government. This resulted in bus upgrades being funded in 2024 (800 in Dandenong) and 2025 (various Werribee and Tarneit improvements). The upgraded Route 800 has been running long enough to demonstrate that if you upgrade the right routes you can get very strong patronage gains that make the improved funding great value for money.
More recently there has been increased community interest from the northern suburbs in improved bus services. Possibly as there are some well used routes and the area was snubbed by the proposed but now abandoned bus reviews. Climate Action Merri-bek has stepped up interest in transport and buses too. While transport in the north has historically had a lower profile than the more vocal west, the north got some transport budget wins in 2025 including halved maximum waits for Craigieburn and Upfield line trains, Sunday service on the 536 bus and a significant bus package across Craigieburn, Wollert and Epping.
The result is that as we come in to 2026 (a state election year) there are established transport campaigns in the west, north and south-east of Melbourne. With a closer election forecast this should put transport advocacy in a stronger position than it was in 2022.
Metro Tunnel Big Switch
The Metro Tunnel technically opened in 2025 but it's not until this day next month that it will become a full part of the public transport network.
This will see what the government is calling the 'Big Switch', delivering (at least) major all week frequency upgrades on the Watergardens - Dandenong corridor and full-time rail access to the Parkville, Anzac and Arden precincts.
The vox pop about 3/4 into this Philip Mallis video confirmed the desirability of high frequency - not just on the Metro Tunnel but also intersecting lines.
A summary of timetables to change on February 1 is here and tabulated below.
There will no doubt be clarification and then release of the timetables we'll get later this month.
There will likely be people asking about further staged upgrades such as the Werribee, Sandringham, Craigieburn and Upfield improvements funded in the 2025 state budget and hopefully also word of progress on the remaining lines to honour the 'new timetable everywhere' promise.
Opportunities for the government to mention these might come just after the Big Switch, in the May 2026 state budget (which would aid credibility due to actual funding), or, if they are dragging the chain, merely in the form of a promise during the election campaign later in the year.
Bus and rail service upgrades
While it involves largely operational rather than capital expenditure, the amounts involved are relatively small, especially if they involve working the existing fleet harder or some judicious reform of overlapping duplicative routes. These days a $2b spend might be a fraction of a major project in one area whereas $100m pa could buy a significant bus upgrade package across Melbourne and/or reduced maximum waits for trains on popular lines.
Community support for some of the above might be aided by the growth of various campaigns mentioned above. Also while the government has been lucky to have had an opposition beset with its own problems, it does have vulnerabilities (including infrastructure in growth areas and transport service levels Melbourne-wide) that any rejuvenated opposition or local independents might challenge them on.
Summary
With the Metro Tunnel properly open, a pre-election state budget and then the election campaign itself, 2026 promises to be an interesting year.













