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Delhi Metro Hikes Fares After 8 Years; From New Minimum Fare To Airport Express Ticket, All Details Here

Delhi Metro commuters will face revised fares from August 25, with ticket prices rising by ₹1 to ₹4. The new structure pushes minimum fares to ₹11 and maximum to ₹64. The hike has sparked mixed reactions from daily riders.

by Mahi Adlakha
Delhi Metro Hikes Fares After 8 Years; From New Minimum Fare To Airport Express Ticket, All Details Here

After holding fares steady for eight long years, the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) has finally pushed through a fare hike, and the move has hit a raw nerve with daily commuters. What DMRC describes as a “nominal adjustment” feels anything but “nominal” to office-goers already squeezed by rising costs, crowded trains, and irregular frequency.

Rise In Delhi Metro Fare: ₹1 To ₹4

Starting August 25, passengers will be shelling out anywhere between 1 and ₹4 more for their daily commutes, with fares now stretching from ₹11 for short hops to ₹64 for longer rides. On the Airport Line, the pinch is sharper, with up to ₹5 extra.

It all began when a commuter spotted a fare revision poster at a metro station and took to X to share their frustration over the sudden hike. The post quickly gained traction, with other users frustrated over how the increase would strain their daily budgets.

As the conversation snowballed, DMRC stepped in with an official response, calling the adjustment “nominal” and reminding passengers that the last revision had been in 2017. “This is to confirm that Delhi Metro fares will be revised with effect from tomorrow, i.e., 25th August 2025. The revision will be nominal, with fares increasing by ₹1 to ₹4. The fares on the Airport Line will increase by up to ₹5,” wrote DMRC. But for riders, the explanation did little to ease the sting, the focus remained on overcrowded trains, long waits, and the feeling that higher fares weren’t translating into better service.

For DMRC, the revision is “nominal’; for commuters, it feels like déjà vu: higher costs with no visible improvement in service. “You raise fares but can’t guarantee a seat? What exactly are we paying for?” one frustrated user asked on X.

Also Read: How To Book Delhi Metro Tickets On Your Uber App? Step-By-Step Guide

Public Reaction Is Anything But Normal

That frustration is a running theme across social media. A passenger travelling to Millennium City fumed that his daily card swipe had jumped from ₹54 to ₹60 overnight, calling the move “nonsense.” Another pointed out that Krishna Park riders often stand around for 16 minutes waiting for a train, while the Pink Line averages six to seven minutes between arrivals. “Increase frequency first, then talk about fares,” one user wrote.

Others were more straightforward with their responses of “Tum log bas fare badao, aur ham public ko preshan karo.”  However, a few argued that the hike is modest and  “almost negligible,” but even those defenders admitted DMRC botched the communication by announcing it at the last minute.

Metro travel is already a lifeline for lakhs of office-goers who juggle peak-hour rush, packed coaches, and occasional delays. For many, an extra ₹10 a day adds up to hundreds by month-end. This is a sore point when wages aren’t rising as quickly. One commuter summed up the emotion with his comment, “DMRC adjusts fares faster than our salaries adjust to inflation.”

The last revision was in 2017, after the Fourth Fare Fixation Committee signed off on a new structure. Back then, the top slab was ₹60. Today it stands at ₹64, with concessions on Sundays and national holidays.

Also Read: Wall Of Gallantry! Delhi Metro Unveils Art Installation Dedicated To Param Vir Chakra Awardees At Moti Bagh Station 

What’s striking is the gap between DMRC’s framing and the public mood. Officials call it a marginal adjustment, yet riders deem it a breach of trust. And until the day trains run more frequently and overcrowding eases, that ₹4 hike will feel like more than just pocket change.

Cover Image Courtesy: fly2blue/Wikipedia

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First Published: August 25, 2025 1:21 PM