What transit riders are telling us: 2025 Customer Satisfaction Survey Results
September 18, 2025
September 18, 2025
The RTA conducts multiple rider surveys that get to the heart of regional transit customers’ satisfaction with service, transit usage, and priorities for improvements. At the penultimate RTA Transportation Tuesday webinar held on September 23, staff presented preliminary results from the 2025 Customer Satisfaction Survey (CSS)—the fifth large-scale effort conducted in partnership with CTA, Metra, and Pace. More than 25,000 riders responded, making it one of the most robust snapshots of regional transit use and expectations to date. Survey results will be released in a report later this month.
The survey comes at a critical moment. With the looming 2026 fiscal cliff, understanding what riders value most is essential to protecting service for the people who depend on it.
The results of the survey provides insights into key focus areas, including:
Transit in northeastern Illinois serves a wide spectrum of people—all ages, all income levels, car owners, and the transit-dependent. The 2025 CSS highlights how these profiles differ by service, and why service cuts would have disproportionate impacts across the region.
Demographics
These demographic results underscore the stakes of the fiscal cliff. Transit is not a niche service—it is a backbone that supports millions of riders across income levels, racial and ethnic groups, and employment situations. Cuts would harm riders who have no alternatives, as well as those who choose transit to reduce traffic, save money, or improve quality of life.
Whether or not a household receives SNAP benefits was a new question in the 2025 survey. SNAP is a federal government program that provides food-purchasing assistance for low- and no-income persons. RTA’s Access Pilot Program currently provides half-fare rides on Metra for SNAP recipients. This information confirms that expansion of the program to CTA and Pace will benefit many riders but is also going to cost more money to operate.
The survey also shows how people rely on CTA, Metra, and Pace day-to-day, revealing both patterns of use and the limited options riders have if service is reduced.
Usage
Taken together, these results make one thing clear: transit is indispensable for millions of riders in the region. The fiscal cliff is not just a funding challenge—it is a direct threat to how people get to work, school, healthcare, and daily life. If service is cut, traffic congestion will worsen, costs for riders will increase, and some trips will simply become impossible.
The 2025 CSS results show that a majority of riders are satisfied with their transit service, but the findings also make clear that there is room for improvement, especially in areas like cleanliness, safety, and service frequency. The CSS uses a multiple regression model to assess the statistical relationship between various service attributes and respondents’ overall satisfaction scores. This is called a "derived importance" approach, that goes beyond what the respondent indicates by helping identify which service aspects have the greatest impact, even if the respondent doesn't consciously highlight them.
High importance, low satisfaction (These areas in particular need improvement to increase rider satisfaction.)
High importance, high satisfaction (It is critical to maintain performance in these areas to keep riders satisfied.)
Low importance, low satisfaction (These areas require improvement but have less impact on overall rider satisfaction.)
Low importance, high satisfaction (Survey results indicate no immediate action is needed in these areas.)
In terms of overall satisfaction, a resounding majority of riders are satisfied with our system. Seventy percent of CTA riders said they were satisfied, which is down 5 points from 2022 (75%) and 15 points from 2016 (85%). Ninety-one percent of Metra riders reported being satisfied, virtually unchanged from 92% in 2022. And 84% of Pace riders said they were satisfied, relatively stable compared with 83% in 2022 and slightly below 88% in 2016.
Across all three agencies, the story is consistent: riders appreciate the value and availability of transit, and the majority remain satisfied overall. It is also clear that satisfaction is tied to service reliability, frequency, and public safety.
These are also the very areas most at risk if the fiscal cliff forces service reductions. Cleanliness, public safety, and reliability require continued investments—and without stable funding, riders’ most pressing concerns will go unmet.
The latest addition to RTA’s Chicago Region Transit Dashboard is a new page devoted to the agency’s survey efforts and will provide results from our regular quarterly panel survey efforts.

The quarterly customer panel survey was developed to act as both a supplement to the triennial Customer Satisfaction Survey, to track a cohort of customers over time, and to provide real-time insights on issues riders and the system face. Panel surveys are much shorter and each one includes question about customer satisfaction, service quality, personal safety, and timely special topics.
Results on the dashboard are from the spring 2025 survey, which was conducted in May. Respondents rated their satisfaction with various aspects of service quality such as service availability (which ranked the highest), on-time performance, personal security, cleanliness, staff, and real-time information. The next quarterly panel survey results will be available later this month and posted to the dashboard.
Learn more on the Chicago Region Transit Dashboard.
RTA and the Service Boards will soon finalize and publish full reports of the 2025 Customer Satisfaction Survey. Sign up for the RTA newsletter to be notified when the Survey Report is available.
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