Since 2025, Public Transport Operators (PTOs) in Singapore have been progressively reducing the continuous driving hours of Bus Captains, as part of broader efforts to enhance safety.
Background
The initiative follows recommendations from the Bus Safety Tripartite Taskforce, which was published in March 2025. Feedback gathered from bus captains suggested that the optimal duration for a single journey should not exceed two hours, as longer runs tend to cause fatigue and stress. Extended driving durations can lead to lapses in concentration and physical discomfort, such as the urge to use the restroom, both of which increase the risk of accidents.
The Taskforce’s report also advised the Land Transport Authority (LTA) to avoid introducing new bus routes that exceed two hours in runtime, and to review and shorten 54 existing routes that run for over three hours where feasible. These recommendations were also accepted by the Government.
The Taskforce also noted that the longest routes in overseas cities—such as London—typically have runtimes of around one hour, in contrast to Singapore’s comparatively longer operating patterns.
Affected Bus Routes
Authorities have not released the full list of 54 bus routes exceeding the three-hour threshold. However, these are believed to include long trunk services during peak hours (such as 51 and 61) and long-distance loop services (such as 857, 966, and airport services).
Methods
Mid-Route Driver Swaps
To address fatigue without cutting or amending existing routes, operators have begun adopting mid-route driver changeovers, a practice known in the local bus industry as CLOWBus (Crew Lay-Over Without Bus) or “jumpbus”. Traditionally, such swaps occurred only at bus interchanges or terminals, but they are now being introduced en route to reduce continuous driving durations.
One such example is Bus Service 858 (Woodlands Int ↺ Changi Airport (Loop)), Singapore’s longest bus route at 73.4 km. Since 18 March 2025, Tower Transit has implemented mid-route driver changes at Changi Airport Terminal 2, allowing each driver to operate for a shorter period before resting. Service 858 now includes scheduled breaks of four to nine minutes during peak hours, and eight to fifteen minutes during off-peak hours.
Tower Transit introduces Mid-Route Driver Swaps on Bus 858 to Boost Safety | Land Transport Guru
Converting Loop Services to Bidirectional Routes
Another way to reduce driving durations involves converting some loop services into bidirectional operations where suitable layover points exist, such as at bus interchanges and terminals. This allows Bus Captains to complete shorter one-way trips instead of continuous loops.
For example, effective 26 October 2025, Bus Services 63 (Eunos Int ↺ Jalan Rumah Tinggi (Loop)) and 173 (Bukit Batok Int ↺ Clementi Int) will be amended to operate bidirectionally.
While Service 173 will terminate at Clementi Interchange, Service 63 will terminate at Jalan Rumah Tinggi, where existing bus parking lots facilitate layovers and driver breaks. These reverse-parking lots are a legacy of the former Rumah Tinggi Bus Terminal.
Potential Route Amendments
As of now, no bus routes have been formally amended, although the Taskforce’s recommendations suggest that such amendments should be explored.
Routes with available city termini or feasible layover points, such as Service 857 near Marina Centre, are among the more practical candidates for restructuring.
Operational and Financial Implications
Under the Bus Contracting Model, operators are paid service fees based on mileage operated, which incentivises efficient operations using fewer drivers. Should operators be mandated to add rest time, this is likely to increase the cost of operations by requiring more bus drivers per route.
For example, when Tower Transit Singapore introduced the mid-route driver swap arrangement, it had to add one extra driver each for the morning and afternoon shifts.
It is not known if PTOs will be compensated for the cost of these arrangements moving forward, especially as these changes represent additional costs not factored into the competitive tendering process for existing tendered bus contracts.
Ancillary Benefits
In addition to improving safety, operators could also gain ancillary benefits through these efforts to reduce continuous driving time. For instance, longer bus routes are more prone to delays and bus bunching due to traffic variations. By shortening routes and/or introducing mid-route breaks, operators can adjust for headway inconsistencies and potentially recover more quickly from congestion-induced disruptions.
Furthermore, restructuring driving duties around shorter continuous driving hours and longer breaks can reduce fatigue and enhance job satisfaction among Bus Captains. This can help PTOs reduce driver turnover and attract more people to the profession.
See Also:
- Bus Interlining | Land Transport Guru
- Bus and Driver Scheduling | Land Transport Guru
- Tower Transit introduces Mid-Route Driver Swaps on Bus 858 to Boost Safety | Land Transport Guru
External Links & References:
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51 and 151 under UP block is just plain insanity. During weekdays morning peak, theres always late departures from those 2 services under UP blk. Sometimes drivers just drop off pax and then head for pickup again.
So that is why recent 151 BCs drive sibei fast. Even Scanias as well. Problem is compared to DDs like B9TL, the Scanias are very bouncy esp along the Bukit Timah area for the Hougang direction if the BC drives fast. I know this because I take 151 (sometimes 154) from Macpherson to SIM and back.
Last week I took a B12 on this service SG3130B to SIM, the CFMS (quite easy to see on this unlike the non-electric buses) stayed on orange the whole trip except for a short while where it was blue at Coronation Plaza, which is weird because by default it should’ve turned to green. And yes, that’s the point where it bypassed a Scania on the same svc.
While this is one angle of safety there’s this sudden braking even when there’s supposed to be a planned bus stop (bus stopping signal is there and bus captains still apply a sudden brake after reaching the stop) or there’s already a view that the signal is red and still the captains apply sudden brakes. Such driving practices are traumatic for passengers and make their journeys inconvenient. Anything being done to address this?
What TTS is doing with 858 is a good idea imo, that way it also doesn’t really impact commuters travelling through the loop. 15 and 966 could do something similar at the Opposite Parkway Parade bus stop, since MRT stations are becoming a popular layover point.
972 also another candidate for improvement. Once Marina South bus hub is ready it might get extended there. Same for 23, 62 and 857. 23 current route can be renumbered 23M.
this means 972/M is likely gonna be amended
I don’t even know what is the purpose of having 972M . Seems like poor planning by LTA yet again. Should have another bus service to replace 972M, and run different route at central . Now, 972M is too long for Zhenghua people