Discover the social and economic benefits of transit.

ACCESS TO JOBS


In U.S. Metropolitan Regions with Population 100,000 or Greater

In U.S. cities there are located within a ½ mile of transit.

AllTransitTM Performance Score

Overall transit score that looks at connectivity, access to jobs, and frequency of service.

When households of all incomes can live in neighborhoods with access to transit and jobs, they have greater choices between housing units, employment opportunities, and multiple transportation options connecting the two. With that expanded choice comes a lower reliance on automobiles. As households drive less, they spend less on transportation, freeing up money for things like childcare, education, health care, conventional down payments, and savings. Through this connection to job opportunities via transit, economic mobility increases. Greenhouse gases go down. Neighborhoods become more economically and environmentally resilient.

View AllTransitTM Rankings

AllTransitTM Gap Finder

See where households are underserved by transit.

Public transit is critical to a successful and equitable economic infrastructure. However, even places that have access to transit can include gaps where underserved communities would benefit from improved service. This tool reveals where transit improvements could provide the most impact by highlighting underserved areas where demand is strongest.

View Gap Finder

Urban Scenarios

AllTransitTM data can be applied to local datasets to enrich the understanding of the availability and impact of transit. Customized analysis can be performed for any city/region where AllTransitTM data is available.

AllTransitTM is a combination of publicly available GTFS data and new data created by CNT for more than 300 regions where it did not previously exist. AllTransit increases our understanding of the value of transit by going beyond simple measures of "where transit exists" to nuanced interpretations of transit quality. AllTransit analyzes the social benefits of good transit service through the lenses of health, equity, and economic development, and users can rely on this information to improve transit in their own cities.

Transit measures consist of data from

544,823

Stop Locations

902

Agencies

13,895

Routes