Commuter costs jumped overnight, turning a rain excuse into a daily cash drain for riders.
Fare spike hits daily riders
Fare spike hits daily riders
- Harare commuters faced sudden jumps from one-dollar rides.
- Prices climbed toward two dollars on basic local routes.
- Increase stuck around past the weather excuse.
- Riders absorbed the hit without warning.
- Heavy storms were blamed for early price bumps.
- Temporary pricing quietly became the norm.
- Delays stopped mattering while fares stayed high.
- Commuters noticed the switch fast.
- Harare terminuses reportedly pull hundreds of thousands weekly.
- Over three thousand operators feed that stream.
- Experts expected cleaner, controlled ranks.
- Touts still run the show.
- Highfield trips jumped well above former rates.
- Budiriro passengers pay more every morning.
- Glen Norah riders lost the one-dollar option.
- Chitungwiza journeys spiked past usual levels.
- Council ranks charge operators daily access payments.
- Touts pile extra demands per loaded trip.
- Middlemen skim harder when fares rise.
- Drivers bleed cash before earning.
- Potholes wreck suspensions and tires.
- Repairs eat into daily earnings.
- Fewer trips happen after breakdowns.
- Costs shift straight to passengers.
- ZIMRA enforces monthly tax payments.
- Police fines drain entire workdays.
- Vehicle Inspectorate Department penalties stack fast.
- Enforcement pressure narrows margins.
- Newer kombis face extreme daily targets.
- Older vehicles still chase triple-digit demands.
- Drivers argue for lower sustainable goals.
- Unrealistic quotas force fare increases.