Canberra residents spent an average of 28 minutes commuting to work last year, according to ABS data released in April. That's not terrible by Australian standards, but it's also not something most people enjoy. The difference between spending those minutes trapped in traffic versus gliding across the city on two wheels or catching a reliable bus comes down to knowing your options—and planning your route like someone who actually lives here rather than just passes through.
The shift matters now because it's forcing residents to rethink how they move around the city. With property values cooling across the nation and mortgage stress climbing, fewer young people are banking on distant suburbs as investment plays. That means more eyes on the neighborhoods they can actually afford to live in right now—and more pressure on transport networks to connect those places to jobs, cafes, schools, and entertainment. Canberra's relatively compact geography gives residents a genuine advantage if they know how to use it.
The Bus Network and Rapid Routes
ACTION buses—the territory's public transport operator—runs 87 routes across Canberra, with express services now connecting Dickson to the city center in under 12 minutes during off-peak hours. The Friday evening 7A service from Woden to Civic closes out the week with regular stops at Westfield Woden and the Canberra Hospital before hitting Civic. Monthly passes cost $89.50, cheaper than three weeks of fuel for most commutes. The network's real strength sits in the crosstown routes. Want to get from Kingston to the Gungahlin town center? The 939 takes 45 minutes and costs the same as parking downtown for two hours.
The ACTION network isn't perfect—wait times during shoulder hours can stretch to 20 minutes on some routes—but it does connect the suburbs most residents actually use. Forrest, Barton, and Yarralumla feed into the city via the 4 and 5. Canberra Hospital in Garran sits on multiple routes. The Belconnen area (Duntroon, Bruce, Scullin) has dedicated express corridors to the city during peak times.
Cycling and Active Transport
Canberra has 760 kilometers of dedicated cycle paths, making it one of the most bike-friendly capitals in the world. That's not marketing speak—residents actually use them. The pathway from Civic to Woden via the Molonglo Valley took on new life after upgrades in late 2024, cutting a 45-minute car trip to 25 minutes on a bike. From Tuggeranong to the city center, the lakeside ride along Lake Burley Griffin's eastern shore covers about 12 kilometers and takes most casual riders 50 minutes. Bike hire schemes operate through the Canberra Bike Share program, with stations at Civic, Braddon, and Kingston. Day passes cost $7.
For residents in Gungahlin (Ngunnawal, Nicholls, Crace), the cycle commute to Civic follows the Northern Brickworks Trail, a 16-kilometer route that opens up the entire city's job market without touching a car. The Canberra Airport area connects via the Majura Parkway cycleway, though headwinds from the south can make the return trip grinding work.
Winter weather in Canberra—frost mornings and occasional ice on paths—means cycling works better from September through May for most people. The ACT Government's transport strategy assumes 10 percent of commutes will be by bike by 2030, up from around 3 percent currently.
Start mapping your commute now. Download the ACTION app, check real-time bus arrivals at specific stops, and test one new route each week. If you've got a car, keep it for the rain and the 6am winter starts. The people getting around this city efficiently aren't the ones gripping their steering wheels in gridlock. They're the ones who've figured out that a 28-minute commute on a bus with a book beats a 28-minute crawl watching brake lights.