Select Bus Service
Select Bus Service (SBS) is a bus rapid transit system operated by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's New York City Transit division, providing limited-stop bus routes across New York City's five boroughs with infrastructure enhancements including dedicated bus lanes, off-board fare collection, and transit signal priority to achieve faster and more reliable service compared to standard local buses.[1] Launched in 2008 with the Bx12 route along Fordham Road in the Bronx, SBS has expanded to include 20 routes serving major corridors, utilizing branded buses and proof-of-payment systems that allow all-door boarding.[2][3] The system's design draws from bus rapid transit principles, featuring fewer stops spaced farther apart at key transfer points and destinations, camera-enforced bus lanes to minimize delays from vehicular interference, and upgraded passenger information systems for better real-time tracking.[4] These elements have resulted in typical travel time savings of 10-20% on equipped corridors and ridership increases of around 10%, contributing to higher bus mode shares in served areas without relying on unsubstantiated claims of transformative urban mobility shifts often promoted by transit advocacy groups.[5][6] While SBS represents an incremental improvement over conventional bus operations through targeted infrastructure and operational tweaks, its effectiveness remains constrained by incomplete lane enforcement and persistent congestion in dense urban settings, underscoring the limits of surface transit upgrades absent broader traffic management reforms.[7]