Places For Me

Getting Around

Free and reduced transit options.

No car? You still have options.

Getting around Nova Scotia without a car is possible. This page covers free and low-cost transit options, how to get a reduced-fare pass, and how to get to medical appointments without paying full price.

Halifax Transit Low Income Pass — $27.50/month

The regular monthly pass costs $82.50. The Low Income Transit Pass (LITP) is roughly one-third of that.

Who qualifies

How to apply

Metro Transit Access — door-to-door service

Free and low-cost ways to get to medical appointments

NS Health Patient Transport (rural NS)

Volunteer driver programs

Many community health boards run volunteer driver programs for medical appointments — free for the patient.

South Shore — South Shore Community Services
Annapolis Valley — Kings Volunteer Resource Centre
Pictou County
Call 2-1-1 to ask about local programs
Cape Breton — Cape Breton Family Place
Halifax area
Call 2-1-1 — programs vary by neighbourhood

Canadian Cancer Society Road to Recovery

Dialysis transport

Cape Breton Transit

  • Serves Sydney, Glace Bay, New Waterford, North Sydney, and surrounding areas
  • Adult fare: $2.50 per ride
  • Monthly pass: $63
  • Low income pass: contact Cape Breton Transit directly — 902-539-8124
  • Routes and schedules: cbrm.ns.ca/transit

Outside Halifax and Cape Breton

Rural transit in Nova Scotia is limited. Here’s what exists:

Transit NS — provincial rural transit program
Connecting smaller communities. Not available everywhere — check the website for your area. Typical fare $3–5 per trip.
Kings Transit — Annapolis Valley
Serves Kentville, Wolfville, Windsor, Bridgetown area. Adult fare $2 per ride.
Trius Transportation — Truro / Amherst area
Intercity routes connecting Truro, Amherst, New Glasgow, Antigonish.
Community shuttles
Call 2-1-1 to ask what exists in your specific community
Many areas have informal community shuttles that aren’t publicly listed.

If you need to get somewhere and nothing on this list covers your area, call 2-1-1. They know about informal and community transport options that aren’t publicly listed.

If you have no money for transit right now

If you genuinely cannot afford a fare right now:

Frequently asked

I’m on income assistance. Do I automatically get the low income transit pass?
Not automatically — you need to apply. But your income assistance letter is all the proof you need. Bring it to 200 Ilsley Ave, Dartmouth or ask your caseworker to help you apply.
I don’t have a fixed address. Can I still get a transit pass?
Yes. The LITP application doesn’t require a fixed address — a shelter address works. Bring your eligibility letter and a shelter confirmation letter if asked. See the ID & Docs page for how to get a shelter letter.
I need to get to a doctor outside my city. Who covers that?
Call 811 first — they’ll tell you if NS Health covers transport for your specific appointment. If not, ask your doctor to submit a patient transport request. The Canadian Cancer Society covers cancer appointments anywhere in NS for free.
Is there transit between cities in NS?
Yes — Trius Tours runs between Truro, Amherst, New Glasgow, and Antigonish. Maritime Bus connects Halifax to other Maritime provinces. Fares vary — check maritimebus.com or call 2-1-1 for current schedules and any subsidised fare programs.