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BART shows signs of life after years of crime but system faces brutal reckoning

bart-shows-signs-of-life-after-years-of-crime-but-system-faces-brutal-reckoning
BART shows signs of life after years of crime but system faces brutal reckoning

BART is finally showing signs of life after years of delays, crime fears and empty stations but the struggling Bay Area rail system still faces a brutal financial reckoning.

The Bay Area Rapid Transit system posted its best quarterly on-time performance in more than a decade, with 94.4% of riders reaching their destinations on schedule during the first three months of 2026, according to the agency’s latest report.

March marked BART’s strongest monthly on-time performance since 2013 and its fewest train delays for any March since 2014 outside the pandemic years.

A view from inside a moving blue train car shows people on a subway platform.

Riders also gave BART’s trains and stations their highest ratings since the agency revamped its scoring system in 2023. Youtube/BART

The improvements come as ridership climbed 15% year-over-year to 14.6 million trips for the quarter — a welcome turnaround for a transit agency that has spent years battling images of filthy stations and violent crime.

Passengers appear to be noticing the difference.

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Customer satisfaction jumped to 90%, up sharply from 70% during the same period in 2023, while complaints dropped nearly 26% from the previous quarter.

Riders also gave BART’s trains and stations their highest ratings since the agency revamped its scoring system in 2023.

A BART train pulls away from Rockridge station with the San Francisco skyline in the background.

Still, despite the encouraging numbers, BART remains stuck in a massive financial hole. Getty Images

People moving through next-generation fare gates, some with green arrows indicating entry and one with a red circle indicating no entry.

New fare gates also appear to be helping crack down on chaos in the system. Youtube/BART

A major reason for the rebound: crime is finally falling.

According to the report, overall crime on BART dropped 42% compared to the previous year. Electronic robberies plunged 90%, electronic thefts dropped 68%, and auto burglaries fell 47%.

Police-related disruptions — once a constant source of delays — also dropped from nearly 3,000 incidents in 2023 to 955 this past quarter.

The agency credits the turnaround in part to a dramatic increase in police visibility after BART doubled the number of officers patrolling trains and stations in 2023.

New fare gates also appear to be helping crack down on chaos in the system.

The taller barriers, designed to stop fare jumpers from squeezing through or vaulting over gates, helped reduce fare evasion sightings from 25% in fiscal year 2024 to just 10% last quarter, according to BART.

A young man with dark hair and a person wearing a medical mask sitting in a train car.

Transit officials warned that without new taxpayer funding, the system could eventually be forced to slash service. Getty Images

Travelers with luggage await a Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) train at Powell Street station.

Customer satisfaction jumped to 90%, up sharply from 70% during the same period in 2023. Bloomberg via Getty Images

Officials estimate the gates are already generating roughly $10 million a year in recovered revenue.

The system also says reports of sexual harassment have been cut by more than half since late 2023 — a decline BART says lines up with the rollout of the new gates.

“These big things aren’t just statistics; they are the foundation of our ridership recovery,” said BART Manager of Operations Reliability Ryan Rod. “Because our riders are seeing a system that is cleaner, safer and on time, they are coming back, proving that when we deliver on our promises, the region responds.”

A woman waves from an open window of a new San Francisco BART train.

March marked BART’s strongest monthly on-time performance since 2013. sfcta.org

A person waiting alone on a dark BART platform with a red digital sign showing

The agency has a long way to go before it can truly declare a comeback. Getty Images

Still, despite the encouraging numbers, BART remains stuck in a massive financial hole.

The agency continues to face annual deficits between $350 million and $400 million after remote work reshaped Bay Area commuting patterns.

BART already balanced its current budget through $35 million in cuts and cost controls, but officials warn the fiscal year 2027 shortfall is still projected to hit $376 million.

Earlier this year, transit officials warned that without new taxpayer funding, the system could eventually be forced to slash service, close stations, cut operating hours and lay off workers — raising fears of a transit “doom loop” where worsening service drives away even more riders.

For now, though, BART appears to have at least slowed the downward spiral.

But the agency still has a long way to go before it can truly declare the comeback complete.


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