Sydney Public Transport Guide 2026: Trains, Buses & Ferries
Complete Sydney public transport guide 2026: use Opal card, navigate trains, buses, light rail and ferries across Greater Sydney zones and routes.
Complete Sydney public transport guide 2026: use Opal card, navigate trains, buses, light rail and ferries across Greater Sydney zones and routes.
Sydney has one of Australia's largest and most comprehensive public transport networks — managed by Transport for NSW (TfNSW). The network includes the Sydney Trains suburban rail, the Metro (North West, City and Southwest, West), Sydney Buses, Sydney Light Rail and Sydney Ferries. All services use the Opal card for payment. transportnsw.info
All Sydney public transport requires an Opal card (or contactless bank card tap). Opal cards are available at newsagents, train station ticket machines and online. Key fare rules: single trip fare depends on mode and distance; daily cap applies (no more than $17.80/day by train); weekly cap ($50 for adult Opal); free travel after 8 paid journeys in a week. Fare details at opal.com.au.
Sydney Trains operates 8 lines from the CBD (City Circle) to the outer suburbs — North Shore Line, Northern Line, Western Line, South Line, East Hills Line, Illawarra Line, Airport Line, Olympic Park Line. Train frequency varies from every 4 minutes (City Circle) to every 30 minutes on outer suburban routes. sydneytrains.info
The Metro network (separate from Sydney Trains) includes Metro North West (Tallawong to Chatswood), Metro City and Southwest (Chatswood through the CBD to Bankstown), and Metro West (currently under construction). Metro is fully automated, frequent and air-conditioned.
Sydney's extensive bus network covers areas not served by train. Light Rail (L1 Dulwich Hill, L2/L3 Randwick/Kingsford) serves the inner south and inner west. Ferry services run to Manly, Parramatta, Neutral Bay and Taronga Zoo. Trip Planner at transportnsw.info.
This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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