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Getting Around: Los Angeles, CA
📓

Getting Around: Los Angeles, CA

✔️

LA Essentials

  • Use Tap card for all LA County. Available in your phone’s wallet. Add $10 to start.
  • Tap every time you get on. Automatic transfers at good prices.
  • Transit app is accurate.
✅

Pros

  • Easy payments with Tap
  • Decent coverage
  • Rail is good if it’s going where you want
  • Generous transfer prices and daily caps
  • Airport connection improving
❌

Cons

  • Huge distances make it difficult
  • Mediocre frequency, especially off peak hours
  • Getting over county line is poor

November 2024, April 2025, December 2025

💡

See Also

📓Getting Around: Orange County, CA
Staircase leading down to a bus station platform in the middle of a freeway. Several layers of lanes on either side, flyover overhead.
Turnstile with a green arrow on a screen, a tap card reader, a left-pointing arrow, and “tap” logo. Closed white metal gate at right.
Freestanding digital screen sign on a sidewalk. Arrival times for E trains to Atlantic Station and Santa Monica. “Normal” status listed below for A, B, C, D, E, and K lines. Structural pillar with advertisement in background. Traffic light in far background.

Fare Payment

The greater Los Angeles area is made up of literally dozens of transit agencies. Until recently, each had their own fare structure, payment media, and transfer policies. Now, they still each have their own fare structure and transfer policies, but they all use the same payment media: the Tap card.

The Tap card makes Los Angeles transit massively easier to use. You can get a physical card, or (I recommend) just activate it in your phone’s transit wallet. You’ll need to add value to it before riding. Then just tap it whenever you get on, and it will figure out the fare and any transfer situation.

When I rode from Norwalk to just outside of Beverly Hills, a trip involving two trains and two buses, it cost just $1.75 total, including 3 free transfers.

Sometimes transfers cost extra, like the 40 cents when I went from Culver City to Big Blue Bus.

Screenshot from Apple Wallet showing Tap card transactions. $4.75 stored value, three rides costing $0 each, and one ride costing $1.75.
My Tap Card invoice, including 3 free transfers. Notice the Transit app tracking my ride on the 617 bus.
Interior of bus, facing out of front window. Tap card reader with “Tap Below” and an arrow on the screen. Another unknown reader to the left. Tree-lined street and pedestrian visible out window.
TAP reader in a bus

How you pay may differ for each ride. For buses, you typically pay as you board. For rail, you tap to pass through turnstiles, or there may be little pillars in the station where you can tap your phone or Tap card.

Just make sure that you tap before/as you board every piece of transit. Fare inspectors may check your card or phone to ensure you’ve paid. I never encountered any, but I’m told they exist.

Riding

Contrary to Orange County, I was actually able to get around LA by public transit relatively efficiently. It wasn’t amazingly fast, but it didn’t feel like an exercise in futility either. I got from Norwalk to Culver City in an hour and five minutes, zipping past traffic.

Light Rail

The light rail C (Green) and E (Expo) lines were fast, clean, efficient, and a pleasure to ride. The A (Blue) had poor signage and was missing arrival information, and was rather crowded on board. As the oldest and (I think) most traveled line, the A is a bit of a crunchy experience, especially in parts of downtown LA where it has to battle with traffic, making it an excruciatingly slow slog for a couple miles. One you’re past that segment, it’s nice enough.

In fairness, the Transit app told me not to take the A, but I wanted to see the situation for myself. It added about 30 minutes to my trip.

Interior of rail car, pointed diagonally out window. Seats at right. “Norwalk” sign visible out window.
Inside the C train

J (Silver) Rapid Bus

Slightly overhead view of a concrete plaza in the middle of a highway. Lanes to both left and right. “Silver Line” on overhead sign. Stop signs and merge signs visible in distance.
J (Silver Line) station on the 110 freeway median

The J (Silver) express bus that runs in the median of the 110 freeway was a mixed experience. Signage was less than clear, and several routes pick up on the freeway median where it intersects the C (Green) line. It was unclear if I was getting on the right bus, but I lucked out and guessed correctly.

Picking up the J was unpleasant. It was very noisy, the signage was outdated (it still referred only to Green and Silver rather than the newer C and J), and generally felt neglected. Not too much garbage, thankfully, but very “is this still open?” brutalist. It all felt very unfinished.

The bus itself was fast, pleasant (as pleasant as a highway can be anyways), and efficient.

Transferring from the J to the E downtown was messy. The bus leaves you a couple blocks from the E station in a less than magical area of downtown Los Angeles.

The routing in the transit app suggested one stop further than I think may have been ideal, and the bus driver blew right past our stop, only stopping after several people shouted.

Open window visible from interior of bus. Bus station blurry outside. WiFi sticker on bus window.
Open window on the J bus

Local Bus

I rode three local bus lines: MTA, Culver City, and Big Blue Bus. Each had its own fare situation, but Tap handled it well. It was seamless, painless, and less expensive than I expected. I got to my friends’ places quicker than expected, multiple times, though I lucked out with light traffic. (Or maybe the buses follow light traffic routes?) The buses were all well maintained and not crowded.

Bus stop. Bus at left, silver metal benches at right. “Big Blue Bus” sign post. Green light just beyond bus, with Overland Ave sign.
Outside the Big Blue Bus
View inside bus, looking out window. Green seat in foreground. Slightly cloudy sky outside with sun at top left, cars, shops, and gas station visible.
Inside a Culver City bus

In one instance, the Transit app got confused when I was switching transit agencies, thinking I was still on one bus when I had already gotten off.

Pedestrian Situation

Do better, Los Angeles, do better.

Pavement with cars parked at right, separated from the street at left by a dirt- and rock-filled curb.
Lack of sidewalk in Palms neighborhood.
Intersection. Sign on traffic signal post has “No Pedestrian” symbol and “Use Crosswalk” with an arrow pointing to the right. Buildings, trees, and billboard in distance.
Lack of crosswalk in Palms neighborhood.
Intersection at night with sign showing “No Pedestrian” symbol and “Use Crosswalk” pointed out of frame to left. Overpass, red light, and cars in distance.
Lack of crosswalk in Culver City.

And by Los Angeles, I also mean Culver City. Culver City, around 2020, had prided itself on being a pedestrian- and bike-friendly city, so I wanted to visit and see what that actually looks like. Apparently, in the past couple years the city has rolled back some of its infrastructure after some NIMBY whining. What you’re left with is a really disjunct situation, with friendly walkable urbanist nooks adjacent to car-choked hellhole boulevards with “No Pedestrian Crossing” signs.

Road underneath elevated train tracks. Near lane painted red, with “BUS BIKE ONLY” painted. Trees and cars in distance.
Shared bus/bike lane in Culver City.

The Last Mile

Transit in LA can get you pretty far. But the area is just so massive. Transit often didn’t efficiently get me right where I was going, just relatively close. I’ve found that often, for the last half mile or so, it can be more efficient to walk, rather than wait for a bus transfer that’s headed that way.

I love walking and am rather good at it, so it’s not a big deal for me, but if walking is slow/difficult/impossible for you, this is probably going to be the factor that turns transit from “pretty efficient” to “takes all day”. I can walk 15 minutes at the start and 15 minutes at the end of a trip, but if you can’t, you may be adding as much as 2 hours, as you wait for the extra bus and the extra transfer on each end of your route.

Bus stop with two green benches. “Big Blue Bus” sign. Street with cars at left, midrise buildings at right.
Big Blue Bus stop

Downtown

I visited LA again to see an old classmate conduct the LA Phil. A couple friends who lived way out in west LA met me there, and at my suggestion they took the E train over. They were raving about how easy and quick it was to get there.

The regional connector helped a lot. Until a few years ago, the light rail lines (gold, blue, and expo) only touched the edges of downtown LA and you had to transfer to the subway to get across. The connector not only stitched those three lines together into two (A and E), but also added a stop a block away from Disney Hall.

Super easy!

End of underground train station platform. “E Santa Monica” train approaching. “Central Av Arts / Bunker Hill” sign overhead
Underground A and E stop near Disney Hall

The County Line

Where transit in Los Angeles really breaks down is crossing county lines. I was staying a few miles over the border in Orange County. In order for me to get to the Norwalk C light rail station, I’d need two buses, with a transfer near the county line and a lengthy wait. This would have added nearly two hours for the first five miles of my trip, vs. an hour and a half for the remaining 30 or so miles. I begrudgingly took a ten minute Lyft for the first leg of my trip, which obliterated my transit cost savings.

Riding from the Airport

As of this writing, LAX almost has a train to the airport. Both the C and K light rail lines stop at the new LAX/Metro Transit Center near the airport. It’s nice! Kinda huge, with lots of bus bays, and big pretty escalators.

Street-level plaza at the LAX/Metro Transit Center, at night. Lots of white structures and bright lights.
The new Transit Center near LAX
Escalators and stairs leading upwards. Wayfinding indicates the C and K lines are this way.
Escalators from the buses towards the trains

Soon (late 2026?) there will be an automated train taking you to the actual airport terminals. Until then, there’s a shuttle bus from the airports to the transit center.

I took the shuttle bus. It came right away, and it was pretty fast! (I’ve heard it sometimes takes a while to come… I may have gotten lucky).

Pedestrian plaza at left. At right edge, a sign with a big number 15 is visible. Out of frame further right would be bus bays.
Where the bus dropped me off.
Various tall white canopies overhead. Staircase in mid-foreground. Signs in background direct you to LAX Shuttle and also to Bike Hub.
What does the Bike Hub look like?

I also saw a sign that said Bike Hub. Someone knows what’s what!

I was already past the fare gates so couldn’t check it out without paying again. Next time!

The trains could run more often… they came about every 20 minutes. But once I was on the train, it was fast! From the time my plane landed, until the light rail deposited me all the way across the city in Norwalk, was about an hour. Wow!

TAP fare card reader with illuminated green arrow, and closed fare gate.
Tap card reader on the new fare gates.
Looking downward at light rail platform. Signage for K Expo/Crenshaw at left. Signage for C Norwalk and K Redondo Beach at right. Further back. glass elevator shafts, and an elevated walkway from left to right.
Escalators down to the C and K tracks.
Overhead countdown clock at rail station: Redondo Beach 3 minutes. Norwalk 10 minutes. Redondo Beach 21 minutes. Norwalk 30 minutes.
Trains coming! Not as often as I’d like but ok.
Passengers boarding a C metro rail train to Norwalk, including one with a bicycle.
C train taking me to Norwalk. Bike friendly!

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