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Surrey sees record number of bus hours added

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More frequent and reliable transit is coming to Surrey this winter, as TransLink increases bus service on 37 routes across the region.

These changes will help reduce overcrowding, improve convenience, and extend service hours.

In Surrey, nearly 7,000 additional service hours have been added on eight routes.

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The second-busiest bus route on the system — #335 Newton/Surrey Central Station — will have added service during peak times to help reduce pass-ups and overcrowding. This is in addition to more frequency on three of the other top 30 most overcrowded routes: #49, #312, and #16.

Other Surrey routes seeing more bus service include the 310, 312, 325, 335, 341 and 342. (See more details here.)

TransLink’s winter service changes take effect Monday, Jan. 5, 2026, and include:

All-day 30-minute service on #609 South Delta Exchange/Ladner Exchange, seven days a week. This is the largest increase to any route this winter, improving convenience for customers travelling to and from Tsawwassen First Nation.

Continuous 30-minute weekday frequency on #80 River District/Marine Drive Station during middays. Previously a peak-only route, connections will now be improved between the fast-growing River District and the Canada Line.

Adjusted SeaBus service on Sundays to improve reliability.

Last trip leaving Lonsdale Quay at 11 p.m. (previously 11:02).

Last trip leaving Waterfront Station at 11:22 p.m. (previously 11:16).

The top five municipalities receiving the most new bus service this winter are:

Vancouver – more than 11,000 additional service hours on eight routes.

Coquitlam – nearly 10,000 additional service hours on 13 routes.

Burnaby – nearly 8,500 additional service hours on seven routes.

New Westminster – more than 8,000 additional service hours on nine routes.

These boosts in bus service have been made possible through TransLink’s 2025 Investment Plan. 

With these new increases, including improvements to 53 routes this past fall, TransLink will have added about one-third of bus service expansion funded through the plan — with more improvements on the way in April 2026.

Author

Chris Campbell has devoted his working life to one area – community journalism.

“That’s where you feel the heartbeat of a community,” Campbell says.

That devotion has led to a journalism career spanning 35 years as a reporter and editor in places ranging from Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows to the upper Fraser Valley and all the way to Victoria — with stops in Surrey, Vancouver, Burnaby, New Westminster and the Tri-Cities along the way.

When he’s not obsessing over his beloved Boston Celtics or watching Goodfellas for the 100th time, Campbell is spending time with his adult daughter and travelling the world with his amazing partner.

Campbell says he’s excited to have joined Constellation Media to write for the Surrey Citizen and The Ridge outlets because of the entity’s commitment to mission-driven journalism, and to tell stories that people are talking about on a daily basis.

So if you have a story idea, just let him know.

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