MCTS Freeway Flyers Return
Express service between suburbs and Downtown will return, but with fewer trips.
Freeway Flyers are returning to the Milwaukee County Transit System (MCTS) as of Aug. 30th.
These buses provide express service between downtown Milwaukee and the suburbs. The service runs during peak travel times in the county to serve riders commuting to and from the city for work.
Many workers in white collar professions that populate office buildings in Downtown transitioned to working from home or remotely at the start of the pandemic. Now many are returning to offices.
MCTS said it is not expecting demand for the service to be where it was before the pandemic, so it’s going to operate the service with fewer trips. The new service schedule can be found on the MCTS website.
The returning bus service includes routes 40, 43, 44, 46, 48, 49, 79 and 143.
Freeway Flyers disappeared in March shortly after the pandemic hit the Milwaukee area and the transit system saw ridership collapse. The system began running a weekend service schedule all week long, and began implementing policies to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 on the buses.
There are no longer passenger limits on the buses, but, per federal regulations, passengers are still required to wear face masks when riding.
MKE County
-
Prosecution Rests Case in Dugan Trial
Dec 17th, 2025 by Graham Kilmer
-
Chief Judge Questioned About ICE Policy, Texts, Emails in Dugan Trial
Dec 17th, 2025 by Graham Kilmer
-
Fellow Judge Testifies in Dugan Case
Dec 16th, 2025 by Graham Kilmer
Transportation
-
Congestion Pricing Cuts Air Pollution in New York City
Dec 14th, 2025 by Jeff Wood
-
FTA Tells Milwaukee to Crack Down on Fare Evasion — Even Where Fares Don’t Exist
Dec 12th, 2025 by Graham Kilmer
-
Will GOGO’s Bus Service Ever Get Going?
Dec 9th, 2025 by Jeramey Jannene














I’m surprised the Freeway Fliers are coming back, and I don’t expect them to last long – especially once the 2022 budget is done.
The model of suburb to central business district commuting has been in decline for years. Given that this service is mostly limited to operating in Milwaukee County, it has an even smaller subset of commuters from which to draw customers.
This service is also expensive to operate, involving many deadhead equipment moves.
Regretfully our region has never (and likely never will) effectively address the need for inter-county transport. MCTS (in my opinion) should concentrate on its core network.