By Roy Denish.
Sri Lankan bus fares are rising after a 12% hike, putting new pressure on daily wage workers, office commuters and households.
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka – The latest Sri Lankan bus fares revision is adding new pressure on office workers, daily labourers and low-income commuters already struggling to protect shrinking household budgets.
The National Transport Commission’s recent 12% annual bus fare hike has pushed the minimum fare to 34 rupees. It has also sent long-distance travel costs up by nearly 20%. For Sri Lanka’s most vulnerable workforce, the change is not a minor transport adjustment. It is another cut from the money needed for food, rent and basic needs.
The fare increase comes as volatile fuel prices continue to disrupt the transport sector. Ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East have added pressure to global energy markets. Earlier this year, Sri Lanka’s monthly oil import bill rose to 536 million U.S. dollars. When the state-run Ceylon Petroleum Corporation adjusts prices to reflect higher global costs, bus operators pass that pressure to passengers.
For private bus operators, the revision reflects harsh commercial reality. They face higher fuel bills, costly spare parts and a fluctuating U.S. dollar. Many see the increase as necessary to keep fleets running. However, for the commuter at the end of the route, it lands as a direct blow to a fixed and fragile budget.
Sri Lanka bus fares expose wage pressure
The deeper crisis appears when Sri Lanka bus fares are measured against daily wages. Although the national minimum daily wage was legally adjusted to between 1,080 rupees and 1,200 rupees, transport is now taking an unsustainable share of that income.
For a labourer travelling from outer provincial areas or suburbs into commercial centres such as Colombo, the journey rarely involves one bus. Many workers must take two ordinary buses to reach a worksite and two more to return home. That can easily cost 150 to 200 rupees a day. If the distance exceeds 100 kilometres, the new nearly 20% long-distance increase applies.
On a 1,200-rupee daily wage, a 200-rupee commute removes almost 17% of the day’s income before the worker buys a meal or any take-home ration. Unlike salaried employees, daily wage earners usually receive no fuel allowance, no travel subsidy and no work-from-home option. If they stay home, they lose income. If they travel, the cost of reaching work reduces the value of a full day of physical labour.
Recovery numbers miss the commuter reality
This creates a serious bottleneck for recovery at the grassroots level. When transport costs rise faster than the real value of work, labour mobility weakens. Workers may start choosing lower-paying jobs closer to home because the higher wage in a distant town no longer makes financial sense.
As Sri Lanka steadies its macroeconomic indicators, the gap between standard policy formulas and the ground reality of the informal sector remains a critical fracture point. A 12% fare hike may help balance a transport sector balance sheet. However, it tilts the survival scales for those living hand to mouth.
