Scheduled for publication on April 17, 2026, the latest update from Belize’s public transportation sector brings a temporary de-escalation of tensions, after private bus operators reached a preliminary agreement with government officials following closed-door talks this Thursday.
The Belize Bus Association (BBA), which represents the country’s private bus operators, had previously planned to suspend all services starting this coming Monday to push for changes to their fare structure. However, after a productive meeting with the Ministry of Transport, the group has agreed to delay any industrial action to allow the national Cabinet time to review their request. Crucially, the association is not calling for an entirely new fare increase — instead, it is asking for administrative approval to align its fares with the rate already charged by the state-owned National Bus Company (NBC).
Currently, private operators are limited to a 14-cent fare, while NBC charges 19 cents for equivalent service. BBA president Philip Jones explained that the group made a deliberate choice to avoid pushing for a new hike that would place extra financial strain on commuters, who are already navigating widespread economic hardship. “We know we are in some tough times and we don’t want to pass that on to our commuters because that will be extremely hard for them,” Jones said in a statement following the talks. “We are not asking for a price increase — we just want permission to charge the same 19-cent rate that NBC already uses.”
Jones added that the BBA set aside discussions of other longstanding sticking points during this week’s meeting, including the goods and services tax (GST) on operational costs and outstanding government subsidy payments, to focus on reaching a quick resolution on fare parity. Per the agreement reached with the transport minister, the BBA has agreed to hold off on its planned Monday shutdown to give the Cabinet space to deliberate on the request during its scheduled Tuesday meeting. If the Cabinet delivers a favorable outcome, the service suspension will be called off entirely. But Jones warned that if no acceptable solution is reached this week, all private bus services across the country will be shut down starting Wednesday.
“Our members have acted in good faith to give the government time to work through this issue,” Jones noted. “We have been reasonable from the start, and we expect a fair response.”
Beyond the immediate fare dispute, Jones also shared perspective on the deeper structural divides shaping Belize’s public bus sector, pointing out that the state-run NBC faces outsized operational challenges that private small-scale operators do not contend with. While higher fuel and labor costs have strained all transportation providers in recent months, Jones argued that NBC’s bloated hierarchical structure puts the company at a unique disadvantage compared to smaller private operations.
“When you compare NBC to the small private operator, the small operator doesn’t carry the cost of a large management team with six or seven high-salaried executives,” Jones explained. “Small operators often handle maintenance and repairs themselves instead of outsourcing service work, and their overall overhead is far lower. For NBC, by contrast, every layer of management adds to daily operational costs. It makes no sense that NBC can sustain its current lower-cost fares without ongoing government support — there’s no way they could operate more efficiently than the small local business owners running private routes right now.”
News outlets covering Belize’s transportation sector will continue to monitor developments closely, with a full outcome expected following the Cabinet’s Tuesday meeting. Any disruption to service would impact thousands of daily commuters who rely on private and public bus routes for work, school, and essential travel across the country.
