There are five regular routes in the system. Additionally, the University operates paratransit services and offers a shuttle route during game days at Huntington Bank Stadium.
Route number
Route name
Terminal
Route description
Notes
120
East Bank Circulator
Fay Thompson Center for Environmental Management
This route circles counter-clockwise through the East Bank campus.
This is the longest and busiest route in the system.
Blegen Hall
The route departs Blegen Hall and crosses the Washington Avenue bridge, stopping at the Student Union before entering the Washington Avenuetransit mall. The next stop is at Huntington Bank Stadium on Oak Street, and then the route enters the University of Minnesota Transitway after a stop at Stadium Village station. The route runs along the edge of the Minnesota State Fairgrounds and Buford Avenue before laying over at St. Paul Student Center.
122
University Avenue Circulator
Carlson School of Management
This route circles clockwise from the West Bank to the East Bank and back across the Mississippi River using the 10th Avenue Bridge, University Avenue, Washington Avenue Mall, and the Washington Avenue Bridge. During weeknights and weekends, the route is extended to Territorial and Frontier Residence Halls on East Bank and Middlebrook Hall on West Bank.
In anticipation for the closure of the 10th Avenue Bridge in 2020, the route has been cut past 11th Avenue, using University Avenue, 15th Avenue, and Washington Avenue to return to West Bank.
124
St. Paul Campus Circulator
St. Paul Student Center
This route circles clockwise through the St. Paul campus.
The system started running hybrid-electric buses in 2008.[4] As of 2010, the system's fleet is primarily composed of hybrid buses. The system also uses a handful of Van Hool European-styled BRT buses leased from the corporation as to not violate the Surface Transportation Assistance Act, which requires transit vehicles to be built in the United States.
During the school year on regular weekdays, the shuttles operate with schedule-less service as often as every five minutes. In 2008, the system carried 3.55 million riders. Despite the fact that the shuttle service is free, it is comparatively inexpensive to operate: with an operating cost of $4.55 million in 2008, the operating subsidy was only $1.28 per passenger. For comparison, Metro Transit's busy Metro Blue Line required a subsidy of $1.44 that year, and that was with many riders paying $1.75 or more for a ride.[2]
In 2010, Parking and Transportation Services received the annual Transit System of the Year award from the Minnesota Public Transit Association.[1]
GopherTrip
GopherTrip is real-time information system that provides bus arrival information to assist in trip planning for the Campus Shuttle system. GopherTrip is available as a mobile app for iPhone and Android systems. Users can also text a stop number to 41411 and receive estimated arrival times for that stop. Certain stops on the system have audiovisual arrival boards. Since buses do not operate on schedules, merely time-points, the app has become useful for trip planning. At the beginning of the 2018 school year, buses were repainted to promote the GopherTrip service.
Audiovisual arrival boards are synced with NexTrip, Metro Transit's own real-time information service, and will announce and display only local buses who share stops. However, the app has no integration with Metro Transit's own app or offers information on any outside service. Sequentially, NexTrip cannot predict the arrival of Campus Shuttles.
Ridership
The ridership statistics shown here are of fixed route services only and do not include demand response services.[5]