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For many Los Angeles college students, public transit is often the cheapest and sometimes the only way to get to campus as gas and other costs rise. But using buses and trains can come with a price beyond the fare.

Metro offers free passes for students at participating K-12 schools and community colleges, while some universities offer discounted transit passes for their students. However, college students who rely on transit have to leave for class hours early to avoid being late, weigh safety concerns, stretch already tight budgets and miss out on college life, students told CalMatters.

Late buses, early alarms

For some students, using transit means getting ready and leaving long before class starts. Makeda Webb wakes up at 6 a.m. in her apartment in Willowbrook, more than five hours before her first class at Cal State Dominguez Hills, less than 5 miles away in Carson.

On most mornings, the psychology major competes with her brother and grandfather, who has dementia, for their one shared bathroom. Even though her earliest class starts at 11:30 a.m., Webb leaves home by 8:30 a.m. because her commute usually takes 40 minutes and unreliable buses have made her late before. Some professors have even threatened to drop her from their classes if she kept arriving late, so she doesn’t take any risks. 

“The bus is constantly late or breaking down,” Webb said. “You have to wait another hour for the next bus. … (It) makes me late for school, so I have to leave extremely early to make sure I’m on time.”

She doesn’t have a car, so despite delays, taking the bus is cheaper for her than paying for gas and other driving costs. Her university offers Metro U-Pass, which allows participating university students to take unlimited bus and train rides for the semester for a flat fee. For spring 2026, the pass cost $67.50.

Her commute gets worse at the end of the day. When Webb takes the bus in the evening after class and extracurriculars, frequent stops and unruly passengers stretch the trip to close to an hour.

“Even though I only live (half an hour) away by bus, it takes double that to get there because the bus driver has to stop the bus or … something stupid is going on, like chaos, which makes it take forever,” Webb said.

A bus rider carrying shopping bags and a bouquet of flowers walks along a sidewalk at night after stepping off a Metro bus. Streetlights, traffic signals and a brightly lit sidewalk vendor illuminate the intersection ahead.
Webb walks home at night after getting off the bus at a stop near her home. “It’s not always enjoyable, especially with the type of people that get on the bus. We have a lot of drug addicts, we have a lot of people who do crazy types of stuff on the bus,” she said. Photo by Martin Romero, CalMatters

For women, the train comes with risks 

Victoria Imo, a graduate student studying social work at the University of Southern California, has a car but often takes the Metro A Line, transferring to the E Line to get to campus. She uses her U-Pass to avoid the high cost of gas and parking.

Imo’s U-Pass is covered by USC’s mandatory transportation fee, which costs $146 for the spring semester. That is cheaper than filling her tank multiple times, which she said can cost up to $60 each time, or buying a parking permit, which can cost up to $585 per semester before added fees.

But saving money means she has to take extra precautions. Because of safety concerns on the train, Imo thinks carefully about where she sits, often near other women, and avoids using her iPad or laptop, opting to read instead. She wears a mask and sometimes headphones without music to avoid unwanted interactions.

In the past, Imo carried pepper spray and a Taser – the latter of which she previously set off to deter an unruly man who was “yelling behind me while I was walking up the stairs,” she said. She activated the Taser so it crackled really loudly while she walked to her car.

Metro contracts with the Los Angeles Police Department and Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department for law enforcement across its systems. The agency also has transit ambassadors to complement officers, report issues and connect passengers with resources. Still, Imo said she has not reported any safety concerns because she’s so used to them.

“I haven’t gone out of my way to give any feedback, because at this point, I feel like this is just what the train system is,” Imo said. “It seems like everyone’s used to it.”

A transit rider wearing glasses, wireless earbuds and a green headband sits on a bench at a Metro rail station platform in daylight, looking toward the camera. Metal information kiosks and the station platform extend into the background.
Victoria Imo at the Expo Park/USC Station in Los Angeles, across from her university campus on April 28, 2026. She said reading helps pass the time during her commute and feels less risky than taking out more expensive items, such as an iPad or laptop. Photo by Martin Romero, CalMatters

Gina Medrano, a psychology student at Santa Monica College, described similar concerns. She has her own car, but gas prices have pushed her to use her GoPass to take the train from the Atlantic Station in East Los Angeles to her school. 

She carries pepper spray, avoids wearing headphones and switches train cars if anyone makes her feel uncomfortable. After witnessing a near-fatal incident, Medrano said boarding a Metro train makes her feel uneasy.

“This lady started hitting a man on the train,” she said. “After she kicked the door of the train while it was running … she jumped out of the train … and it was right in front of me. I had to call my mom to come pick me up, because I just couldn’t handle what I’d just seen.”

Medrano said the incident was one of several disturbing things she’s seen on the train. She regularly sees things that make her question her safety and wonder why there isn’t more enforcement.

“It’s kind of normal to see needles and unsightly things on the train,” she said. “There’s not really a lot of enforcement or safety. I don’t really feel safe on it.”

For some, police presence sets off alarms

Zak Nirenberg, an electrical construction and maintenance major at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College, said their biggest safety concern is not other Metro riders, but Los Angeles Police Department officers.

“They’re intimidating,” Nirenberg said. “Most of the time they’re on the (train), they’re looking for someone to harass or actively harassing someone.”

Viewed from inside a Metro rail car, a transit rider wearing a light blue baseball cap, sunglasses and a red plaid shirt stands by the open doorway holding a vertical pole. On the platform outside, two Metro Transit Security officers talk while passengers board and exit another train.
Zak Nirenberg rides the Metro train from Grand/LATTC Station in Los Angeles to Pico Station in downtown Los Angeles on April 30, 2026. They said their biggest safety concern is not other Metro riders but Los Angeles Police Department officers. Photo by Martin Romero, CalMatters

Norma Eisenman, a spokesperson for the LAPD, declined to comment on Nirenberg and others’ concerns about officers’ presence during fare inspections. The department directed CalMatters to file public records requests for documents about LAPD protocols.

Metro says safety is improving

Metro says it’s making progress on safety, pointing to recent declines in violent crime and nonviolent offenses. The agency attributed those declines to increased visible uniformed personnel, fare enforcement and partnerships with behavioral health organizations on its transit system.

In a February Metro media release, Maya Pogoda, a spokesperson for the agency, wrote that violent crime fell 6.7% in 2025 from the year before. She added that crimes involving trespassing, narcotics and weapons decreased 33%. 

Metro also announced the Department of Public Safety Dashboard, which publishes safety and security data submitted by law enforcement agencies and shows a more complicated history. According to the dashboard, after Metro resumed bus fare collection following a pandemic pause, trespassing reports, which include fare evasion, rose nearly 1,200%, from 126 in 2022 to 1,635 in 2023. In 2024, the number more than doubled to about 4,500.

Arrests also rose sharply, with LAPD and sheriff’s department arrests increasing by 81% in 2023 to about 5,000, then nearly doubling to about 10,000 in 2024. Since 2020, the top two crime types reported on Metro have been trespassing and battery.

A Metro Transit Police officer stands at the open doorway of a Metro Rail train, speaking with a passenger seated inside. Another officer is visible farther down the platform as passengers and reflections appear in the train windows.
Los Angeles Police Department officers conduct fare inspections on a Metro train at Grand/LATTC Station in Los Angeles on April 30, 2026. According to Metro, officers conducted more than 116,000 train boardings and about 500,000 TAP card inspections in 2025 alone. Photos by Martin Romero, CalMatters

Pogoda wrote that the agency is trying to address safety through a mix of law enforcement and public services aimed at addressing homelessness, addiction and untreated mental illness. These efforts will all be coordinated through Metro’s new Department of Public Safety. 

Student passes help, but gaps remain

Even Metro programs meant to make public transit more affordable for students don’t remove every cost barrier. For some, the upfront cost of even a discounted pass can still be out of reach.

Stephanie Verdugo, a sociology major at Cal State LA, lives in on-campus housing and relies on Metro buses to run errands and, previously, to get to work. She said her university sells a U-Pass to students for about $100 a semester, but even as a frequent transit rider, Verdugo said she couldn’t afford the upfront cost.

“I always had a very tight budget … so I could never actually buy (the U-Pass),” she said. “I would just have to pay the regular way.”

Still, even while paying Metro’s regular $1.75 fare for bus or train rides, Verdugo said using public transit has saved her money. That is partly because the agency’s fare-capping system limits how much regular fare riders can spend to no more than $5 each day and $18 each week before rides are free.

“I don’t pay a lot of money considering how much I travel on the bus,” Verdugo said. “As a person who was traveling every single day for a month straight, I only spent like a maximum of $80, which, to me, is really good.”

For Nirenberg, the Los Angeles Trade-Technical College student, the GoPass saves them a lot of money on gas and parking.

“(It’s) not just for school, but for life in general. I don’t pay for parking anywhere,” they said. “I don’t have to worry about finding parking. It’s fantastic.”

‘I’ve never been to a college party’ — when transit derails social life

Beyond getting to class, transit can also shape how much of college life students get to experience. Julian Levy, a political science student at Occidental College, lives in on-campus housing and relies on public transit to visit his family and get around Los Angeles. Without a car, Levy said, participating in college life off campus means planning around transit schedules, deciding whether a trip is worth the time and often leaving early to get back on time.

“I remember just feeling so frustrated … just because I didn’t have a car,” Levy said. “I had to leave early from (a friend’s birthday party) because of the time I would have to spend on the much slower public transit system.”

One trip to an Occidental soccer game at Chapman University in Orange made Levy reconsider taking transit to away games. He had taken Metro and Metrolink to get there without any issues, but after the game, one of the few trains back was canceled. A second train eventually came, but only after Levy waited about two and a half hours on the platform. He ended up getting back to campus after midnight.

“I remember thinking after that, ‘Do I really want to rely on public transit?’” Levy said. “I’ve always been able to get where I’ve needed to go, but I’ve definitely reconsidered whether something is worth the risk of getting stranded somewhere.”

A transit rider stands near the open rear door of a Metro bus at night, holding a bouquet of flowers, a phone and a drink while looking out toward an empty bus stop.
Webb looks out from the Metro bus door on her ride back home as she holds her bags and the flowers she received at a school event. She said relying on transit has affected friendships because seeing friends can take hours by bus. “A lot of my friendships have fallen off because we’re not able to see each other,” she said. Photo by Martin Romero, CalMatters

For many students CalMatters spoke to, public transit can be unpredictable, crowded and unsafe. Still, it remains the most affordable, and sometimes the only, way for students to reach campus and make attending college possible at all.

“I’m a low-income student, I’ve never been to a college party. … I don’t have the money, I don’t have the time,” said Webb, the Cal State Dominguez Hills student. “I have not gotten the full (college experience), but I’m still thankful, though. At least there’s an option.”

Martin Romero is a contributor with the College Journalism Network, a collaboration between CalMatters and student journalists from across California. CalMatters higher education coverage is supported by a grant from the College Futures Foundation.

CalMatters is a Sacramento-based nonpartisan, nonprofit journalism venture committed to explaining how California's state Capitol works and why it matters. It works with more than 130 media partners throughout the state that have long, deep relationships with their local audiences, including Embarcadero Media.

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