Huntsville Transit will waive Orbit fares for cyclists May 11-17
Huntsville riders traveling with bicycles can board Orbit free May 11-17 during Bus & Bike Week, a limited-time promotion tied to Bike Month.
Huntsville Transit is waiving Orbit fares for riders traveling with a bicycle during Bus & Bike Week, May 11-17, 2026.
The city says the promotion is part of Bike Month and is meant to make combined bike-and-bus trips easier for commuters, errand runners, and other riders who already use both modes to get around Huntsville.
This is a limited-time fare waiver, not a permanent change to Orbit pricing. The free ride only applies when a passenger is bringing a bicycle during the promotion window.
Who qualifies for the free ride
According to the city’s transit announcement, Orbit fixed-route rides will be free for cyclists during Bus & Bike Week. The waiver is tied to passengers traveling with a bicycle, so it does not mean every Orbit rider will board free during that week.
For people who already split trips between biking and transit, the promotion can make a practical difference. It can help a commuter ride part of the way to work, take care of a short errand without needing a car, or connect to a bike-friendly route or greenway and then finish the trip on a bus.
How Orbit bike racks work
Huntsville Transit’s Orbit service includes fixed-route buses equipped with front-mounted bike racks. Riders using those racks should plan ahead, because the city’s rider information is designed around fixed-route service and standard boarding basics.
The city’s Orbit information page is the best place to check route details before heading out. That matters most for first-time riders or anyone planning a bike-and-bus trip during the promotion, since the waiver is limited to Orbit fixed routes and does not change the usual rules for boarding or loading bikes.
Why the city is promoting it
Huntsville is framing Bus & Bike Week as a way to support mixed-mode travel and encourage more people to combine cycling with transit. In practical terms, that can help reduce reliance on single-occupancy car trips for some everyday travel, especially on short commutes and local errands.
The city has not presented the promotion as a measured traffic fix or a permanent subsidy. It is better understood as a short, rider-focused incentive that makes an existing transit option cheaper for a specific group of users during one week in May.
What riders should do next
Anyone planning to use the promotion should check the Orbit route they need, confirm the trip dates, and make sure they understand how the bike racks work before boarding. The waiver runs only from May 11 through May 17, 2026, and only applies to riders traveling with a bicycle.
For Huntsville residents who already bike part of their route, the city is offering a small but useful break on transit costs. For everyone else, the broader takeaway is simple: this is a temporary fare promotion, not a citywide change to Orbit fares.