
The Facts
Fare enforcement is rising on Muni. The agency is hiring 17 more fare inspectors, boosting the team from 59 to 76, and pushing what officials call a culture of visible payment.
That means more riders physically tapping when they board. Muni’s monthly passes are only available on Clipper, and SFMTA’s proof-of-payment rules require riders using Clipper to tap every time they board. Rachel Swan at The Chronicle reports SFMTA is also looking at tap-based fare media for some youth, low-income, and employee riders who now may board without a visible tap.
The Context
This is about money, but it is also about norms. Riders without valid proof can be removed and fined more than $100, and SFMTA says fare inspections per hour are up 86% since July 2024. The agency is making that push while facing a projected $307 million deficit beginning in fiscal year 2026-27.
The GrowSF Take
Visible payment matters. On a system with all-door boarding, social norms do real work: when everyone taps, everyone sees that paying is expected. Free and discount programs should remain, but SFMTA is right to move toward a system where riders visibly show eligibility too. We all need to chip in for a vital city service, and people who do not pay should face real consequences.
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