The morning crawl along Northbourne Avenue has a new rival now. Over the past 18 months, the ACT government's investment in dedicated bus lanes and the explosion of e-bike uptake across inner Canberra has quietly redrawn the commute map. On any weekday, you'll see riders zipping down the bike paths along Commonwealth Avenue toward the parliamentary triangle, many of them on electric machines that cost between $2,000 and $5,000. The car remains king in Canberra's outer suburbs, but the inner city commute is shifting.
This shift matters now because Canberra's population is growing faster than its road infrastructure. The Australian Capital Territory added 18,900 residents between 2021 and 2026, with most clustering in established suburbs closer to the CBD. That density, combined with rising fuel prices hovering near $1.65 a litre, has made alternatives to the daily drive genuinely appealing for the first time in the city's history. The ACT government committed $37 million to rapid bus corridors in the 2024-25 budget, targeting completion by 2027. That's not hypothetical money—it's dirt being moved now on Gungahlin Drive and Canberra Avenue.
Walk through Dickson or Reid on a Tuesday morning and you'll spot the physical evidence. The bikeway network expanded significantly through 2025, with new protected lanes now running the full length of Antill Street in Dickson and connecting into the Canberra Avenue corridor toward the city. The ACT's own cycling participation survey, updated in March 2026, showed 12 per cent of weekday trips in inner suburbs were now made by bicycle, up from 8 per cent three years earlier. That's not Amsterdam-level infrastructure yet, but it's a measurable shift in how thousands of Canberrans are actually moving through their neighbourhoods.
The economics of getting somewhere else
The maths have changed. A monthly parking permit in Civic now runs $150 to $200, while an annual MyWay card—the territory's public transport ticketing system—costs $1,040 for unlimited travel. For someone commuting from Belconnen to the city, the daily drive burns roughly 4 litres of fuel each way, or $13 at current prices. The ACTION bus service runs the 1A line from Westfield Belconnen to the city every 15 minutes during peak hours, with the trip taking about 30 minutes. Add parking, and you're looking at $18 to $22 daily just to sit in traffic.
E-bike ownership in Canberra's inner suburbs has tripled in the last two years, according to retailers surveyed in May 2026. Most buyers cite the 20-minute ride time from suburbs like Yarralumla or Forrest into the parliamentary triangle as the trigger point—faster than the bus, cheaper than driving, and no parking headache at the destination. The ACT government's $1,200 e-bike rebate scheme, which ran from late 2024 through June 2026, provided a financial nudge, though only 3,400 claims were processed before the program closed.
What actually happens next
The rapid bus corridor project will reshape commute patterns in Gungahlin once construction wraps in 2027. Those dedicated lanes—physically separated from car traffic—promise 20-minute trips from Nicholls to the city, versus 40-45 minutes on the current mixed-traffic network. Early transport modelling from the Department of Transport suggests the corridors could shift 15-20 per cent of commuter trips from cars to public transport within two years of opening, though those figures remain theoretical.
For now, Canberrans heading to work have genuine choices for the first time. They're not all choosing the same option. The car isn't going anywhere in the suburbs, but in Canberra's inner ring, the commute is no longer a given drive along Northbourne. That's the real story.