Now that congestion pricing has finally started, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s initial data from the first week of tolling showed a promising start. While it will likely take months to understand the toll’s full effect, the most immediate drops in commute times were on the bridges and tunnels entering the core of Manhattan, with 219,000 fewer cars entering the congestion pricing zone from Jan. 6-10. Traffic inside the “congestion relief zone” was more of a mixed bag, with some reductions while other routes were flat or even up slightly when compared to January 2024.
Lincoln Tunnel
January 2024: 6 min, 59 sec
Jan. 8, 2025: 4 min, 14 sec
Travel time: ↓ 39%
Holland Tunnel
January 2024: 12 min, 48 sec
Jan. 8, 2025: 4 min, 27 sec
Travel time: ↓ 65%
Brooklyn Bridge
January 2024: 5 min, 38 sec
Jan. 8, 2025: 4 min, 2 sec
Travel time: ↓ 28%
Manhattan Bridge
January 2024: 3 min, 37 sec
Jan. 8, 2025: 3 min, 16 sec
Travel time: ↓ 10%
34th Street (West Bound)
January 2024: 36 min
Jan. 8, 2025: 23 min, 13 sec
Travel time: ↓ 36%
42nd Street (West Bound)
January 2024: 27 min, 52 sec
Jan. 8, 2025: 32 min, 38 sec
Travel time: ↑ 17%
Fifth Avenue (South Bound)
January 2024: 21 min, 59 sec
Jan. 8, 2025: 22 min, 13 sec
Travel time: ↑ 1%
Eighth Avenue (North Bound)
January 2024: 24 min, 16 sec
Jan. 8, 2025: 18 min, 50 sec
Travel time: ↓ 22%
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