Friday, March 20, 2026

26% to run Myki? VAGO reports on Myki modernisation



This state Auditor-General report is about the much-anticipated (and now under trial) move towards credit card acceptance on myki readers and an eventual transition to account based ticketing. It was tabled on Wednesday. 


My top 4 take-aways:

- The project is on track to its revised time-line after previous delays (due to contracting squabbles) and a cost increases ($137m more).

- 26% of revenue collected by the ticketing system goes to run it. VAGO puts that number at $2.96 out of a $11.40 full daily fare which seems high. If you looked at it differently (eg attributed a flat amount from each passenger to run the ticketing system) there'd be some ticket types (eg the $3 concession daily for a short regional trip) where the fare hardly offsets myki running costs. And note that this report was done before under 18s got free travel so ticketing system cost will be spread over even fewer paying passengers. 

- Verifying concession entitlements is complex and high-risk. It will be done in later stages after the system is up and running for full fare passengers travelling in the existing Myki area. In other words full fare passengers will be able to pay with credit or myki cards but concession passengers will just have myki for a while yet. 

- VAGO found that DTP couldn't really quantify benefits or demonstrate value for money. Thus continuing a tradition of haphazard administration going back at least 35 years with four ticketing systems under eight premiers. 

There is a much better summary than the above and some discussion on the Reddit thread below: 

https://www.reddit.com/r/MelbourneTrains/comments/1rwzyks/victorian_auditorgenerals_office_modernising_myki/

Where to from here for modernised Myki?

History almost always repeats with public transport ticketing systems in Victoria. No other Australian state has made heavier weather of rolling out new ticketing systems than Victoria. Symptoms include much-publicised project time and cost blow-outs. And megalitres of newspaper headline ink. 

There have also been performance issues but efforts to fix them for both Metcard and Myki made reliability at least acceptable in the last few years before the next system took over. In contrast scratch tickets were never successful (except for fare evaders) so the system got replaced. 

The above did not mean that there were not some functionality limitations that the subsequent ticketing system tried to fix. And one poor decision can set a bad path that ripples for years. 

Myki was intended to be a dual ticket system. Regular passengers would have durable cards that they could top up while occasional passengers would have a disposable short term ticket option.

They could have gone two ways with the short term ticket. Either it could be an expensive to produce cardboard ticket with the electronic smarts to open station barriers or a cheap paper ticket that needed to be shown to an attendant.

The project opted for the electronic cardboard ticket. Which came into use when myki started in Geelong. There was a time that you could see discarded short-term Mykis on the ground there. Their  spiral antennas were visible when you held them up to the light. Short-term tickets worked but were expensive to produce, especially relative to concession fares. 

The Myki project was then in a lot of trouble, frequently making headlines for cost and time blow-outs. Premier John Brumby later said that he received wrong advice from the then DoT regarding the choice of KAMCO to deliver and regretted not challenging it.

The incoming Baillieu Coalition government of 2010 reviewed the Myki project. The project too far advanced to scrap, it proceeded in a reduced scope form. The cut meant that some parts of the state would not get Myki. There would also be no Myki ticket vending machines on trams and no short-term ticket option.

Hence even casual travellers would have to find a Myki outlet, pay for a piece of plastic they might never use more than once and then top it up with enough to pay the fare. And it would be awkward if they wanted to get a refund of unused credit or return their card.

The descoped Myki was fine for regular train commuters but a pain for tourists and other occasional users. Myki's clunkiness won it no friends amongst various civic and opinion leaders (the same people who also gripe about our lack of airport rail).

A bidding war during the 2014 election campaign led to the (counterproductive) CBD free tram zone being created, possibly exacerbated by Myki's issues. And the state government contracted with Conduent to update myki to allow credit card and mobile payments - something else that would help visitors and occasional users. 

Unlike trams, Myki card top-ups were offered on buses. But that was suspended during (and not resumed after) the pandemic. With paying hard and evasion easy, fare dodging went through the roof with DTP's attitudes towards evasion oscillating between denial and apathy

Things might have worked out differently had paper been chosen for the short-term ticket medium. Per-ticket costs (a few cents) would have been lower. Thus it might have escaped the descoping under the Coalition. There would have been fewer hassles for occasional travellers, less fare evasion on buses and likely less of a perceived need for updates to support credit card payments.

Claimed advantages of cardboard short-term tickets opening barriers may have been over-stated as the vast majority of passengers entering stations would be using durable Mykis. Governments could instead have concentrated on matters more central to providing good service, such as not descoping infrastructure on projects such as Regional Rail Link and Metro Tunnel and improved buses, instead. 

Back to today's reality. Below is the time-line from the VAGO report. 


Right now we are in the start of Phase 2, with the full fare paying public invited to try credit card payment on selected V/Line and Metro lines. If results are good this will be extended to all train lines in the existing Myki area. Followed by tram and bus. 

Phase 3 involves extensions to more passengers (concession holders) and more areas (those not in the myki areas). The latter is potentially beneficial for areas like South Gippsland that are relatively close to Melbourne yet are still on paper tickets because their train lines closed years ago all their transport is provided by coach. 

The audit flagged verifying concession entitlements as a complication. That's both for DTP administratively (with 150 agreements needed with concession authorities) and for the customer with use of an online portal involved. The concession platform is expected to cost $34m over 10 years (on top of $1.96b over 15 years for the main contract). 

Then there's the political angle. This is an election year. The current long-standing state government is struggling in the polls. Even though it's generally poor policy, cutting fares has been politically fashionable as a 'cost of living' measure in some states. As has extending 'free' travel to more groups such as this government has done with under 18s (under the "Youth Myki" - confusingly the concession fare "Child Myki" is now just for 18 year-old adults!).

Especially if Myki costs about as much as it recoups in fares for some concession passenger trips the temptation to descope aspects of modernised Myki Phase 3 while also extending free (or very cheap) travel to some groups might just be too tempting for some in or out of government. 

The next several months will be very interesting for transport fares and ticketing in Victoria!

Thursday, March 19, 2026

UN 226: The drive to use less fuel - a crisis not to waste


It's been a while since there's been a concerted push to use less fuel. Especially one based on urgent availability considerations. Hence we've had the Victorian Farmers Federation urge (mainly) city dwellers to reduce their use of scarce fuel supplies by switching to public transport

Active transport hasn't had so much emphasis with the City of Yarra ripping up bike lanes and the Victorian Greens seeking to remove active transport's relative financial benefits by making public transport free for a month.  

Past fuel supply squeezes have involved policies like speed limit reductions (such as in the US in the 1970s) and odds and evens registration plate rationing at petrol stations. High fuel prices in the 1970s (again due to Middle East instability) led to a revival of inner city living and public transport in some cities. In Melbourne's case it was confirmation that trams were here to stay with new trams being ordered and extensions on routes such as 59, 75 and 86. 

Some 30 years later it was fuel price rises coupled with a strong economy and booming CBD employment led to rail crowding in the 2005-2010 period. Pressures on the network led to a revival of investment in it, with projects such as Regional Rail Link and the Metro Tunnel being the result. Not uncoincidentally researcher Jago Dodson released the VAMPIRE index gauging the vulnerability of Australian suburbs to oil price shocks in 2006. 

Today more of our cars are electric and working from home is more common. There has been population densification in some areas. On the other hand our cities have continued to sprawl. Corner stores have shut in established suburbs while new suburbs never got them. Smaller families, the rise of private schooling, school consolidations, car ownership, both parents working and increased traffic has sharply reduced walking and cycling to schools. 

Then there's the burgeoning delivery economy. Yesterday I received a small (non-essential) item that could have fitted in a padded post bag and put in the letterbox at the start of my driveway by a postie on an electric scooter. Instead it came to me in a huge packing-material filled box from a courier (who was likely not well paid) driven to my door in a big truck. Surely that doesn't make sense in an oil conscious world. 

What are some responses to the pressures to maximise fuel availability for essential uses for which substitution is not easily or quickly possible? 

Below is a personal transport pyramid that I've made. It looks a bit like a food pyramid. To conserve fuel you  want to encourage people to do as much as possible near the base and as little as possible of what's near the top.

Behaviour change might involve sometimes jumping one or two steps to a less energy intensive option. Or it might involve doing the same thing but less often. Eg combining several tasks in a single car trip. If homes have multiple cars you want the ones with the highest fuel usage to hardly ever be driven.  

Many can't or won't make big leaps. But enabling smaller movements might still be desirable. For example someone going from public to active transport during crowded peak periods creates room for someone else to go from driving to public transport. 

Current hybrid commuting patterns may also offer opportunities. Currently Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays are busier than Mondays and Fridays. But are there opportunities to encourage some commuters to switch to the quieter days? That's not to everyone's taste but even if a few people do it there may be a cascading effect where space is freed for others to shift modes.  

Incentives need to have some thought about them and not just be knee-jerk reactions. They need to me mainly about making desired alternatives good, not just cheap. We should emphasise what can be done on a large scale, quickly and cheaply with existing assets. It needs the direct opposite thinking to the "Big Build" approach that has dominated transport planning and depleted our budgets. For example tactical reallocation of road space to favour more energy efficient / higher people throughput transport. 

Pop-up bike lanes, zebra crossings at all busy roundabouts to reduce severance they cause, walker-friendly traffic light signalling, opportunistic land acquisitions to gridify the active transport network, more shade and seating, delivery lockers walkable from all homes and pop-up convenience stores in growth areas without them could all be part of the story. 

Yesterday the state government quietly released Victoria's Active Transport Plan. The release could not have been softer despite active transport being central to reducing non-essential uses for fuel and freeing up supply for harder to substitute for essential uses such as farming. There was no media release, no mention in parliament and (critically) no new funding.

The state might try gentle persuasion to encourage councils to do their share for active transport but something dramatic, like monitoring (or sacking) a recalcitrant council like Yarra for pulling up bike lanes, might send a short sharp message to all councils with regards to expected behaviours in a fuel and climate emergency.  

Perverse incentives need to be avoided, even though they are superficially attractive. And it is essential to offer no less incentives for active transport as may be offered for public transport. If you don't do that you risk the reverse, ie people switching from active to public transport, potentially crowding out those who might be switching to the latter from driving. 

"Free" public transport (like suggested by The Greens) is one example that is likely to attract as many (if not more) people from active to public transport than from driving. Plus its distributional benefits are dubious as it helps those nearest the best service the most while not assisting regional and suburban dwellers with no or sparse service. There may well be an argument to review the equity of fares (especially for shorter trips that we charge quite heavily for versus our insanely cheap entirely diesel long distance V/Line fares) but "free" public transport is not the way to go and could even be counter-productive.

On the other hand service upgrades on routes that are busy and/or serve catchments sensitive to cost of living pressures is likely a better policy response that has a higher potential to attract people from driving. Economy with regards to fuel consumption is likely maximised if bus networks are reviewed to reduce inefficient overlaps.

Cheaper to operate electric buses sitting idle in a fuel crisis? Yes it's a thing in Melbourne. For all the hype about electric buses, we are doing a terrible job at using the fleet efficiently to carry the most number of people all week because network reform failed to accompany electrification. For example just 1 in 6 of the bus routes at Ventura's electric Ivanhoe depot operate 7 days.

The one that does (the 527) is only every 50 minutes on Sundays and is inefficiently overlapped by other routes. Scope exists for simplified bus networks to make timetables less lumpy, even out intervals and likely equalise loadings to optimise bus occupancy without overcrowding in high activity areas like Coburg and Preston, with an example involving the 527 presented here. The government got cold feet on northern suburbs bus reform in 2023 but a revival is justified given changed circumstances.   

Another electrified depot, Kinetic's at Preston, is the base of other northern suburbs bus routes like 503, 506 and 508. The first two have short hours and lack Sunday service. 503 is the only public transport directly serving a significant high-rise and social housing area in Brunswick West. 506 is Melbourne's busiest bus route without Sunday service. 508 does have Sunday service but only at 40 minute intervals. As the major east-west route across Melbourne's inner north it has even higher patronage potential than the 506. 

Because the inner and middle north have significant north-south routes (trains and trams) but limited east-west connectivity (entirely mostly infrequent buses) bus route simplification could assist in modal shift as the network transitions to a more versatile grid with more consistently easier connections. 

Opportunities also exist in areas hardest hit by cost of living increases. Noting that higher fuel prices are inflationary, with the effect likely cascading through to essentials such as food. 7 day upgrades to routes like 802 and 804 cut food deserts by enable easier access to fresh food destinations such as Dandenong Market. Similar boosts to limited service routes like 538 (Campbellfield), 559 (Thomastown) and 844 (Doveton) would also deliver gains.

Acceleration of bus roll-outs in unserved growth areas is another winner. Time-lines for implementation are typically long. However at least some of this is a matter of political choice from a government that has got good at removing level crossings in less time than it takes to do the simpler job of adding a new bus route. 

Some potentially redundant or over serviced routes have been rationalised since this item was written in 2020. The soon to happen upgrade of Sandringham line trains to every 10 min weekday off-peak might make the rationalisation of poorly used north-south bus routes in the Brighton area parallel to the train worth doing, especially if it enabled service kilometres to be transferred to higher patronage potential bus corridors in busier, denser or higher needs areas. 


In Melbourne we are not used to upgraded timetables taking much less than 2 or 3 years from planning to implementation. Active transport projects might also take a while to plan. But things can happen much faster when there is the will such as a fuel emergency might encourage. Here this government can draw inspiration from the Bracks-Brumby government that in one 18 month period added a massive 8000 extra bus services per week and what cities like Paris have done with regards to active transport.    

Hopefully 'never waste a crisis' becomes a guiding principle for DTP in the next little while so that a legacy of a better active and public transport network endures even if/when current tensions subside.  

See other Useful Network items

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

TT 224: What happened to timetables at train stations?



First they came for the fares posters.

Since January 1, 2026 you haven't been able to rock up at a Melbourne train station and instantly see how much a trip, or a day out, costs.

Even though successive governments have reduced the number of fare zones across the state such that it's close to a flat fare (with a few cheaper or free exceptions such as Zone 2 only or before 7:15am).

Even though, especially in this time of surging fuel prices, the fact that you can travel all day anywhere for under $12 full fare, should be seen as a bargain Transport Victoria would want to promote rather than an impost to apologise for. 

And even though because the replacement poster (which requires scanning a QR code with a smartphone to find out fares) has an effective date it is no cheaper to have a poster that omits fares than  display them.   


The usability impact of this is to make finding out fares more complicated, as follows: 


Introducing unnecessary hurdles in finding fares makes passengers less aware of the value of all-day travel and features that should be selling points. Such as mobility across modes and across the state for no extra cost, Zone 2, weekend and after 6pm discounts and free travel period such as Early Bird on weekdays. While doing nothing to arrest rampant fare evasion that parts of DTP choose to deny, thus sapping the system of revenue.   

Timetables

A month later came the "Big Switch" Metro Tunnel timetable with changes for some other lines as well. 

That saw West Footscray to Dandenong get trains every 10 minutes first to last while service to Sunbury, Cranbourne and East Pakenham improved to a maximum 20 minute wait. Most other lines remained with 30 to 40 minute maximum waits with improvements coming later in the year for Upfield and Craigieburn. Gaps can even be 60 minutes on Sunday mornings as late as 9am in outbound directions. 

In other words outside peak times the vast majority of the Metro rail network remains one where passengers need to check train times to avoid significant waits, especially if making connections. This is a peak-heavy commuter/regional railway as opposed to a true 'metro' system. Yet passenger information decisions are based on us having the latter, which is not the case at ~90% of Melbourne suburban train stations due to slow NDP implementation

Notwithstanding the continued importance of specific times (as opposed to frequency information) on most lines for most of the day due to aforementioned periods with low frequency, Metro stations that had timetable changes did not get suitably updated wall timetables.  


In case you haven't paid much attention, wall timetables came in two formats. First of all there were the whole line timetables. These showed times for every train at every station on a line. They were handy for working out travel time between two stations on a line. However their print was small so they were probably not as used as they could have been. And the practice of ruling a red line under your station's times to make finding it easier was not always adhered to. These were typically on two sheets, one for weekdays and one for weekends, with these not always being correctly installed next to one another. 

Much easier to read were the large print station specific timetables. These showed departures from each station, not the whole line. That was good for legibility but did not give travel times. However you got a good idea of frequency at the times you were travelling at.

Exact times are particularly important here, because unlike Sydney (where most stations have a maximum 15 minute wait over wide hours) our train frequencies can be 10, 15, 20, 30, 40 or 60 minutes, with many possible on the same line within a short time. Noting that the usability and connectivity of a 10 minute service is vastly different compared to one every 40-60 minutes.  


Also, despite DTP thinking is that real time is always better than printed timetables, not all stations yet have visual PIDs. Displays that exist can be too small to display trains on all lines (particularly at stations served by multiple lines such as Caulfield and Malvern). Reliability can be an issue too, with some displays being broken or partly working for months. 


Even the best (and fully working) displays cater for the 'here and now' traveller. That's a different function to wall timetables that convey time and frequency information for later in the day (or on another day).

Both are needed - the former to help people on their current trip and the latter to open possibilities for future travel. DTP's stodgy anti-growth/anti-business bureaucratic culture generally resists communicating value (like the prior example with fares), selling features of a service (eg frequency) or, more radically, creating demand for something that customers did not previously know they wanted or even knew existed.

Some individuals in it may be aware but collectively the department has a poor grasp of marketing or behavioural psychology such as promoted by the marketer Rory Sutherland (who cites many transport examples including the use of multimodal transport maps - video below).



This causes DTP to put all its eggs in information systems (such as its app and journey planner) that either undersell the service or, like an old-fashioned general store, relied on customers knowing what they wanted and how to ask for it. As opposed to a supermarket approach that actually expands demand for an item through merchandising. I first identified this as an issue with PTV in 2020.

That mentality, which tends towards decline, continues unchanged today under DTP/TV. It is particularly corrosive today given that, with pressured state budgets emphasis for the next few years needs to shift to maximising the usefulness of our existing transport infrastructure as a first rather than a last resort. Asset utilisation, service levels, network reform and communication, as repeatedly mentioned here, need to become priorities rather than afterthoughts, especially as governments urge a shift to public and active transport as the fuel crisis bites.  

Franchise agreement compliance

Matters like passenger information (whether about fares, routes and timetables) are part of the passenger experience so get mentioned in the Metro Trains Franchise Agreement's Passenger Experience Module

At the time of writing this is 'MR4' with the next agreement 'MR5' currently in franchisee selection stage. 

11.6 of the Passenger Experience Module (p25) talks about information to be provided at stations. Requirements include: 

(i) the Master Timetable as it applies to Passenger Services of the Franchisee which stop at that Station or at the Southern Cross Station Access Areas (as the case may be) and each master timetable of such other Train Operators as they apply to passenger services which stop at that Station or at the Southern Cross Station Access Areas (as the case may be); or

(ii) if PTV agrees, a frequency timetable as it applies to Passenger Services of the Franchisee which stop at that Station or at the Southern Cross Station Access Areas (as the case may be) and each frequency timetable of such other Train Operators as they apply to passenger services which stop at that Station or at the Southern Cross Station Access Areas (as the case may be).


Presumably the Master Timetable was the line timetable discussed before. Unlike some tram stops we don't have frequency timetables but that is because no line is yet individually frequent enough to justify them. The station-specific departure times mentioned before would have been a good substitute. 

It then goes on to say: 

(c) For the purposes of this clause 11.6, publish means:
(i) making the information available upon request in one or more booklets or in other similar form at all Staffed Stations and at the Southern Cross Station Access Areas; and
(ii) displaying it on walls or information displays at Stations.

(d) The Franchisee must ensure that each Station and the Southern Cross Station Access Areas have on display:
(i) information on fares;
(ii) a map of the metropolitan fare zones;
(iii) information on other public transport services which operate in the vicinity of the Station or the Southern Cross Station Access Areas (as the case may be); and
(iv) information about the roles, functions and services provided by the PTO, as reasonably requested by PTV, and contact details for the PTO.

(j) The Franchisee must display a local area map at each Station and at the Southern Cross Station Access Areas, provided that PTV may require the Franchisee to utilise the space in which that map is ordinarily displayed to instead display any other notice specified or provided by PTV. The multi-modal public transport map provided by PTV titled 'Getting Around Melbourne', or an equivalent map as notified by PTV, must be displayed at all Stations and at the Southern Cross Station Access Areas. 

11.7 of the Passenger Experience Module (p26) is about printed system information, for example timetables. This must be done by the Franchisee according to the Master Style Guide. 

However there is some flexibility. Eg 11.8 refers to a Practice Note issued by PTV where standards of published information are set down. Also 11.2(c) gives flexibility for PTV to designate any medium for providing Transport Information to passengers either in addition to or as a substitute for any of the existing Transport Information Systems

So there may have been some chopping and changing, although the overall effect is that what's at stations is not as comprehensive as 11.6 specifies. Direct information on fares, for example, has been removed. Information on other public transport services are typically not provided right at stations (though they might be outside at bus and tram stops). Also multimodal maps at stations are rare (despite PTV/TV producing them and putting them on their website). 

How station passenger information should be

To maximise both current day utility and future patronage station passenger information should both tell people what they need to know know while widening travel possibilities for later. 

The latter requires what you might call 'push' promotion. This is bold messaging that's unavoidably in your face when you travel the network. This is not something you have to go looking for. Nor is it something only available in small print on your sun-faded phone screen because some overpaid DTP exec (with fewer sales skills than a student casual at JB) thought they were keeping up with technology. 

Minimum standards for passenger information at Metro stations could be along these lines: 

1. Fares displayed. No matter what you need fare information displayed at station in poster form. And we need to go one better than we did in 2025. The information up then failed to display fares for Zone 2 only (which are cheaper than Zone 1). While probably done with good intentions in the name of simplicity, it exacerbated a genuine issue with fares (short trips are seen as too expensive) and ignored that a fair number of passengers living in Zone 2 are under some financial pressure. Having information that overstates what people making Zone 2 only trips need pay is poor on both counts. 

2. Rail network map (as current)

3. Melbourne-wide multimodal frequent network map A new item showing frequent routes only

4. Local area multimode PT map These are already produced by DTP (erroneously called 'bus maps') and are on their website in a not very prominent location. The cost of having them up on stations is tiny but they would greatly assist multimodal connectivity. An example of an underused asset as DTP goes to the work of producing them but does not install them much on the network. Ideally frequent routes would be shown in bold. 

5. Local area walking and cycling catchment map that would also show bus/tram stops and major attractions

6. Station precinct map Already up at some stations but more detail needed including connectivity to nearby trams and buses

7. Large print style station specific train departure timetable Such as at stations prior to 2026

8. Departure lists for buses with times, route numbers and destinations at stations As is standard practice in Perth which has a much stronger multimodal planning, marketing and passenger information culture than Melbourne as its PTA is consistently institutionally stronger than our DTP

9. Disruption advice as currently done

10. Other posters that promote value and opens possibilities for travel

11. Real time displays at station entrances and on platforms sufficient in size to list at least the next two trains of each stopping combination

Conclusion

In 2026 the amount of passenger information displayed at Metro stations has been cut. Rail network maps persist but direct fare information has gone, with the latter replaced by a QR code link to the Transport Victoria website.

Timetable information has also been removed even though all week service upgrades have so far been insufficient to justify alternatives, eg metro style frequency guides, on the vast majority of the network. The existence of timetables are more important at Melbourne stations than those elsewhere due to the wide variations in service frequency across the network, including gaps of up to 60 minutes between trains.  

DTP will no doubt argue that printed timetables are less relevant due to the widespread ownership of mobile phones and more information displays at stations. However the roll-out extent, adequacy and reliability of the latter can vary. Also, due to the lack of a will and culture to grow patronage, the department is not as cognizant as it should be in the need to provide information not just for the trip at hand but also in a manner that fully reflects the network's usefulness and value for money. 

See other Timetable Tuesday items here