bus & subway passes in rome

Public transport (buses, trams and the metro) in Rome is so cheap that you probably don't really need a weekly or monthly pass ticket if you're only here for two or three weeks. The 'metrebus' ticket costs only 1 Euro. This is really good value, and the price has stayed the same for about ten years. It is valid for 75 minutes of travel almost anywhere in and around Rome and you can change buses as many times as you want during that time. You are also allowed one subway (underground railway) journey during that period, using the same ticket. The ticket typically looks like this:

Actual size - wanna print some?
Sorry, we don't recommend it - Rome's railway police are armed! Anyway, they're printed on special paper, and the blue stripe is magnetic, so forgers beware!


You can change trains as often as you need to during your one subway journey of course, but you cannot leave a station and re-enter or enter another station for a fresh journey on the same ticket. There's almost no travel distance limit though - no zones like in London - you can almost travel from one end of Rome to the other on the same ticket. It's a fraction of the cost of London Transport charges right now.


punching your metro ticket

You MUST remember to punch your tickets in the little punching machines at the entry barriers in stations, on the station platforms, or inside the buses (usually near the rear of the bus, on the left). The punching machines are usually coloured yellow. In fact since 2007, most of the metro stations are being updated with electronic turnstiles that won't open unless you insert your ticket in the slot to be punched, just like London or New York has had for fifty years. Rome has finally caught up to 20th Century fare-fraud busting technology.
Sometimes the buses are so packed that you can't fight your way down the aisle to get to the machine, but do your best, as ticket inspectors are on the prowl, and they know that lots of American students resident in the city try to dodge fares by buying a ticket but never punching it.
The tickets are made of really cheap thin card, so you have to poke it fairly caerfully downwards into the slot at the top of the yellow punching machines in the direction of the red arrow, with the ticket facing you just like in the picture above. The machine sucks it in and in about a second and a half, spits it back up out at you, with your platform entry-time and an extra barcode printed on the back, and also, we assume, coded into the magnetic strip, so it's practically fraudproof.

DON'T JUST LEAVE IT THERE! - It's not just an entry token like in New York. You have to pull the ticket out again and KEEP IT WITH YOU for the duration of the journey as proof of payment. Also LOOK then on the back of it to confirm that it has been correctly stamped with the time and date of travel. If it hasn't, you can still be spot-fined or prosecuted for evident fare-dodging.

Remember that in Italy, (conversely unlike the UK or US), you are presumed guilty until proven innocent, so if they catch you without a valid ticket, they will not listen to excuses. For example, EVERY morning down in the subway at Termini station there is a portable desk set up in a niche of one of the pedestrian walkway tunnels for the interchage between the Linea A and the Linea B, and standing around that desk every rush hour are two or three unfortunate fare dodgers who have been caught and are paying out spot fines to the inspectors that sit there.

NOTE - Even if your ticket is a season ticket for All-Day, Three-Day, Weekly, Monthly, or Yearly, you still MUST punch it in the turnstile machine, the FIRST time you use it. This validates it for the duration stated on the ticket, but there is no need to punch it again. Just the first time.

There are also some new plastc credit-card sized metro and bus pass cards available now, mostly as long term or annual season passes. These don't have to be inserted in the slot, you instead just wave it across the front of the yellow punching machine in a swiping action and the machine senses it and opens the turnstile barriers for you. However, I've observed a lot of people around town having difficulty getting the machine to sense the chip in the plastic card okay. This is distressig because the plastic card has nothing visible on it to say that it's still current. It has to be periodically electronically topped up with money like a cellphone simcard, but only the machine can sense this, so you should also carry with you the printed paper receipt they gave you when you last paid to top up your plastic metro card. Stupid, huh? - Negates the purpose of the electronic card.

You'll find that the metrebus ticket gives you plenty of cheap flexibility of travel for short stays in Rome. You can buy them at any subway station or bar tabacchi, (but you CANNOT buy them on the bus! ie - You can't pay the driver - You have to have a ticket before you can get on a Rome bus, train, or tram (though some trams now have a new ticket-selling machine inside them, although this can't be relied upon - There's even a sign on it saying you can't rely on it - More time-wasting and intentionally intimidating Italian bureaucratic inefficiency... That sign in essence says - "We are the State, we expect you to be subjugated and dependent on us, but don't expect any obligation of considerate service-efficiency from us in return")

Bottom line - DON'T get on an Italian metro, train, bus or tram, or pass a ticket barrier into a station without having a valid ticket ALREADY in your possession, and STAMP the ticket when you get on the bus or tram, or go through the station entrance barrier, if it hasn't been stamped already. Otherwise you are liable for prosecution or large spot fines by random spot-checking roving ticket inspectors.

There are also ticket selling machines in most metro station entrance lobbies, if the ticket selling window is unmanned. The machines give change, but don't bank on it.


click for more on monthly, weekly, daily and season passes

 

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