LTFRB approves fare hikes for jeepneys, buses, TNVS

The Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board announced fare increases for nearly all public transport modes, effective March 19, amid rising fuel prices from the Middle East conflict. LTFRB Chair Vigor Mendoza called it “one of the hardest decisions of the board” due to erratic fuel surges.

On March 17, 2026, LTFRB Chairman Vigor Mendoza announced during a press briefing provisional fare hikes for jeepneys, buses, P2P buses, airport taxis, and TNVS, effective March 19. He stated the board considered fuel prices (P75-P80 per liter), rising spare parts and maintenance costs, and a 19% minimum wage increase from 2022 to 2025, amid erratic surges due to the Middle East conflict. The new matrices will become permanent by June but could be reduced if fuel prices drop substantially. Per Rappler, traditional jeepney minimum fare rises to P14 from P13 (+P1), per km to P2 from P1.80; modern jeepney to P17 from P15 (+P2), per km to P2.40 from P2.20. Ordinary buses to P15 from P13 (+P2), per km to P2.49 from P2.25; air-conditioned buses to P18 from P15 (+P3), per km to P2.98 from P2.65. TNVS base fares increase by P20 across all types, per km remains P15. For example, Gateway Mall II to SM Masinag will cost around P275. P2P buses up 15%, such as Ortigas to Makati P69 from P60, NAIA to Clark P460 from P400. Airport taxi flag-down to P115 from P75 (+P40) per Rappler, or P155 per Philstar. Provincial bus fares increased March 14 with new per-km rates. Motorcycle taxis under review, along with petitions from ordinary taxis and UV Express. Philstar examples: Divisoria to Cubao modern jeep P26 from P23.8; SM Fairview to Luzon Avenue ordinary bus P27.45 from P24.25; Manila to Baguio P542 from P469.

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President Marcos Jr. announcing PUV aid, fuel subsidies, and barangay support to counter Middle East crisis impacts on fuel prices and livelihoods.
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Marcos approves PUV aid, fuel subsidy and P8-billion barangay support amid Middle East crisis

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President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has approved a service contracting program for public utility vehicles, a P10-per-liter fuel subsidy starting April 15, and the release of P8 billion in assistance for over 42,000 barangays nationwide to cushion impacts from the Middle East crisis such as higher fuel prices, a weaker peso, and threats to livelihoods, Malacañang said Thursday. PUV drivers will receive additional income of P40 to P100 per kilometer, while commuters get at least 20% fare discounts on routes linked to trains and major bus lines.

The Department of Transportation (DOTr) and Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) are studying a proposal to grant amnesty to transport network vehicle services (TNVS) drivers onboarded despite exceeding the vehicle cap. DOTr Secretary Giovanni Lopez said some transport network companies (TNCs) have surpassed their driver and vehicle limits. Ride-hailing platforms including Joyride and Grab have also reduced their commission rates.

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The government began a pilot rollout of a P10-per-liter fuel subsidy for public utility jeepney drivers in Metro Manila on April 14, with 52 accredited gas stations participating. Energy Secretary Sharon Garin said the three-month program will test the system before expanding to other public utility vehicles.

Public service vehicle operators in Kenya have raised fares by 50 per cent following a sharp increase in fuel prices. They also called for a nationwide strike starting Monday.

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Manibela launched another series of strikes amid fuel price hikes, while the United National Public Transport of the Philippines declined to join. UNPTP called for dialogue over conflict, as Manibela and Piston pressed on with protests. Police bolstered security to safeguard non-striking drivers.

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