Moveability survey: drive-alone rates remain high; employer subsidies linked to more shared-mode use
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Summary
Moveability presented a 2025 regional commuter survey of 1,874 respondents showing a 71% drive-alone rate across six counties (68% in the three-county Travis/Hays/Williamson area), a drop in bike commuting and evidence that employer subsidies increase active/shared-mode use.
Kathleen Lu of Moveability told the commission the 2025 commuter survey covered six Central Texas counties and reached 1,874 residents at a 95% confidence level. Across the full six-county area, the drive-alone rate was 71%; for the three-county region of Travis, Hays and Williamson the comparable drive-alone rate was 68%.
"We are making progress towards that 50/50 mode split with the 68% drive-alone rate," Lu said when explaining year-to-year comparisons limited to the three-county area.
Lu highlighted five findings: continued investment in Williamson County (which had the second-highest transit ridership), a clear link between employer subsidies and increased use of active and shared modes, a reduction in telework compared with 2024, an average one-way commute of about 11.59 miles, and demographic disparities in mode use with high- and very-low-income households showing relatively higher active/shared-mode usage.
On employer subsidies, Lu said 68% of respondents agreed employers should subsidize active and shared modes but only 8% currently receive such subsidies; those who received subsidies were 19% more likely to use active/shared modes.
Commissioners asked whether the survey ties respondents to specific workplaces or addresses; Lu said the survey captured general residential location (enough to identify counties and broader areas) but does not collect exact employer names. Commissioners requested future cross-tabulations tying income, residential location and transit access to better inform policy choices about where to expand service and which communities to target for mode-shift programs.
Moveability posted the full report at movabilitytexas.org and affirmed it will provide follow-up analysis on biking declines and location-based patterns in future briefings.
