Daly City BART Station
Daly City BART Station is a Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) station located in Daly City, California, in San Mateo County, approximately nine miles south of San Francisco's Financial District. The station serves as a major transit hub for residents of Daly City and surrounding communities, connecting commuters to the broader San Francisco Bay Area transit network. Opened on November 3, 1973, as part of BART's expansion into the Peninsula region, it functions as the southern terminus for several BART lines and as a transfer point between rail and regional bus services. The facility accommodates passengers traveling to employment centers in San Francisco, the Financial District, and other regional destinations. As one of BART's more heavily utilized stations outside San Francisco proper, Daly City Station plays a significant role in regional transportation, though ridership has declined sharply since the COVID-19 pandemic — systemwide, BART's weekday boardings in 2025 stood at roughly 45 percent of pre-pandemic levels.[1]
History
The Daly City BART Station opened on November 3, 1973, marking the completion of the initial phase of BART's Peninsula Line extension. Construction was part of a broader regional development initiative undertaken during the Bay Area's post-World War II suburban expansion era. BART had begun revenue service on September 11, 1972, with trains running between Fremont and the MacArthur station in Oakland, and the system quickly moved to extend rapid transit service into developing suburban communities to accommodate regional growth and reduce automobile dependency. Daly City, which experienced significant population growth throughout the 1960s and early 1970s, was identified as a strategic southern terminus for the new line. The original station design incorporated surface parking facilities, bus connections, and pedestrian infrastructure to support multimodal access. The opening was celebrated as a symbol of modernization for San Mateo County communities.[2]
In subsequent decades, the station underwent several significant modifications and upgrades. During the 1980s and 1990s, waiting areas, lighting systems, and security infrastructure were improved. Following the October 17, 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, which caused widespread structural damage across the Bay Area, BART undertook a major seismic retrofit program to strengthen the station's structural integrity and bring it into compliance with updated California safety standards. The early 2000s brought further modernization, including the installation of enhanced passenger information systems, improved accessibility features required under the Americans with Disabilities Act, and expanded platform canopies for weather protection. In 2012, a comprehensive station rehabilitation project addressed aging infrastructure and improved customer amenities. These investments reflect BART's ongoing effort to maintain the station as a functional and safe facility, adapting original 1973 construction to contemporary standards over more than five decades of operation.
Geography
Daly City BART Station is situated within an urbanized commercial corridor of Daly City, positioned near major transportation arteries including Interstate 280, which connects Peninsula communities with San Francisco to the north and Silicon Valley to the south. The surrounding area is characterized by mixed-use commercial development, residential neighborhoods, and retail establishments that have grown around the transit hub over the decades since the station's opening. The station's elevated platform structure is accessible via grade-separated pedestrian facilities and parking areas that occupy several city blocks. The relatively flat topography of this portion of the San Francisco Peninsula supports pedestrian access compared to the more steeply graded hillside neighborhoods nearby.
The station represents one of the northernmost BART stations in San Mateo County. The site sits within a few miles of the San Francisco city boundary — close enough that the station draws riders from adjacent San Francisco neighborhoods as well as from communities deeper in Daly City and unincorporated San Mateo County. Regional land-use patterns have concentrated commercial activity near the station, consistent with what urban planners describe as transit-oriented development, though the density of that development remains lower than at comparable BART stations closer to downtown San Francisco.
One notable aspect of the station's geographic and political context is San Mateo County's relationship with BART. Unlike Alameda, Contra Costa, and San Francisco counties — which are original BART member agencies and contribute directly to the system's operating budget — San Mateo County is not a full member of the BART district and does not pay into BART's primary funding base, even though several stations, including Daly City, serve the county. This arrangement has been a recurring point of tension in regional transit funding discussions, particularly as BART faces structural budget shortfalls.[3]
Services
Daly City BART Station is served by multiple BART lines, making it one of the more transfer-friendly stations on the Peninsula. The Yellow Line (Antioch–San Francisco International Airport/Millbrae) and the Green Line (Berryessa/North San José–Daly City) both operate through the station, with Daly City serving as the southern terminus of the Green Line. During peak weekday commute periods, trains depart at intervals of roughly 15 minutes per line, with reduced frequency during off-peak periods and late evenings. Because several lines originate or terminate at Daly City, the station serves as an operational base for crew scheduling and vehicle staging.
The transportation network surrounding the station extends well beyond BART rail. The San Mateo County Transit District (SamTrans) operates multiple bus routes connecting the station to neighborhoods throughout Daly City, Colma, South San Francisco, and surrounding unincorporated communities. These bus connections extend transit access to areas not within walking distance of any BART station, functioning as a feeder network that draws riders onto the rapid transit system. Local shuttle services and employer-sponsored transportation programs also connect to the station during commute hours.
The station's parking facilities include surface lots accommodating commuters who drive to the station. Bicycle parking and secure bike lockers are available for riders arriving by bicycle, and pedestrian pathways connect the station to adjacent sidewalk networks. BART's parking fees at Daly City and other Peninsula stations have historically generated revenue that contributed to system operations, though parking utilization dropped significantly after 2020 as remote work reduced peak-hour commuting.[4]
Ridership
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Daly City Station ranked among BART's more active stations, reflecting its role as both a terminus and a transfer point serving a large suburban catchment area. BART as a system earned approximately 70 percent of its operating revenue through fare collection and parking fees prior to 2020, making it one of the more financially self-sustaining public transit agencies in the United States. The Daly City station contributed to that fare revenue base through consistent morning and evening peak-period boardings driven by San Francisco-bound commuters.
Pandemic-related shutdowns beginning in March 2020 devastated BART's ridership base. By 2025, systemwide weekday boardings had recovered to roughly 45 percent of pre-pandemic levels, while weekend ridership reached approximately 60 percent of its former volume. These figures represent a structural shift rather than a temporary disruption, as the widespread adoption of remote and hybrid work arrangements permanently reduced the number of commuters making daily trips into San Francisco. The Daly City station, heavily dependent on downtown San Francisco commuter traffic, has not been insulated from this decline. The resulting fare revenue loss has placed BART in a severe fiscal position that directly threatens service levels at all stations, including Daly City.[5]
Current Challenges
Budget Crisis and Potential Service Cuts
BART faces a structural budget deficit of approximately $367 million, driven primarily by the collapse of fare revenue following pandemic-era ridership losses. In February 2026, the BART board of directors passed a contingency plan that would cut service by up to 70 percent if additional funding is not secured. Such cuts would drastically reduce train frequency at Daly City Station and could eliminate or curtail Green Line service that terminates there.[6]
The financial situation reflects a broader problem with how BART is funded relative to other major American transit systems. California's state government contributes substantially less to BART's operating budget than comparable state governments contribute to systems like New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which receives approximately $5.5 billion in annual state support. BART's historical reliance on fare-box revenue left it acutely exposed when ridership fell. The San Mateo County funding gap — the county's non-membership status in the BART district — compounds the difficulty of assembling a regional funding solution, since Peninsula stations like Daly City generate riders and economic activity in a county that doesn't contribute to BART's core budget.
Regional transit advocates and elected officials are pursuing multiple paths to close the deficit, including state legislative appropriations, local ballot measures, and federal transit grants. The outcome of those efforts will determine whether service at Daly City Station is maintained at current levels or significantly reduced in the coming years.
Safety
Daly City BART Station, like several other stations in the system, has experienced serious safety incidents in recent years. In 2025, BART Police sought public help identifying a suspect in a stabbing that occurred at the station, and investigators asked for witness information following the incident.[7][8] BART Police maintain a presence at Daly City Station and publish incident reports through the agency's public news feed. BART has implemented platform safety measures at several stations, including platform intrusion detection and increased police staffing during peak hours, as part of a broader effort to address rider safety concerns that have contributed to ridership hesitancy since 2020.
Attractions and Connections
The station's primary value to users is the regional access it provides rather than attractions at the station itself. From Daly City, passengers can reach downtown San Francisco — including the Financial District, the Civic Center, and the Mission District — in roughly 20 to 30 minutes. Transfers at Civic Center, Powell Street, Montgomery Street, or Embarcadero stations connect riders to virtually every major San Francisco attraction, from the Ferry Building to Golden Gate Park. San Francisco International Airport is accessible via the Yellow Line without a transfer, a significant convenience for travelers departing from or arriving at the Peninsula.
Educational institutions reachable via BART from Daly City include San Francisco State University, accessible via the Green Line, and University of California campuses served by connections through the transbay tube to the East Bay. The station is also a practical starting point for reaching Colma, immediately to the south, which contains a concentration of retail development including one of the Bay Area's larger auto dealership corridors and regional shopping.
Local commercial activity along Daly City's corridors adjacent to the station — restaurants, grocery stores, and neighborhood retail — provides immediate services for station users and reflects the modest transit-oriented commercial development that has taken root near the hub since 1973.
Economy
The Daly City BART Station has functioned as an economic anchor for the surrounding commercial corridor since its opening, supporting retail, office, and service-sector employment concentrated near the transit hub. Real estate within walking distance of the station has historically commanded a modest premium over comparable properties requiring automobile access to transit, a pattern documented at BART stations across the system by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission.[9]
The station's economic contribution extends beyond the immediate neighborhood. Commuters using the Daly City station generate economic activity throughout the Bay Area — patronizing San Francisco businesses, filling office buildings, and supporting the labor market connectivity between Peninsula residential areas and regional employment centers. The availability of rapid transit access allows employers in downtown San Francisco to recruit workers who live in Daly City, Colma, South San Francisco, and beyond, widening the effective labor market for businesses dependent on transit-accessible workers.
That economic relationship is now under pressure. If BART service is significantly reduced as a result of the agency's budget deficit, the economic premium associated with proximity to the station could diminish, and workers who depend on the Daly City station to reach San Francisco jobs would face longer commutes or the cost of automobile ownership. The station's economic value is, in this sense, contingent on BART's ability to sustain reliable service through its current financial crisis. The construction, operation, and maintenance of the station and its associated infrastructure represent a decades-long public investment whose returns depend on continued transit connectivity between San Mateo County communities and the broader Bay Area economy.