LAX Hikes Pickup Fees to Ease Traffic, Critics Cite Cost Concerns; Skylink Launch in Summer

March 10, 2026
LAX Hikes Pickup Fees to Ease Traffic, Critics Cite Cost Concerns; Skylink Launch in Summer
  • LAX proposes new access fees raising terminal-area pickups to $12 and Skylink pickups to $6, with similar increases for drop-offs, in a move aimed at steering riders to the Automated People Mover and easing terminal-area congestion.

  • Current fee structure would see Uber and Lyft paying $4 to pick up and nothing to drop off, as officials push for market-rate pricing.

  • Airport officials emphasize traffic and environmental goals, noting that distributing trips across more locations could improve safety and reduce gridlock, while acknowledging potential impacts on travel budgets and hotel shuttles.

  • The Skylink, delayed from its 2023 opening, is positioned to open in early summer, operate 24/7 with four-car trains, two-minute headways, and a capacity around 200 passengers per carset, potentially moving as many as 85 million passengers annually.

  • LAWA argues higher fees reflect market rates and help reduce congestion, though critics warn of affordability concerns and timing.

  • The fee increase is part of a broader effort to modernize LAX ahead of major events and reduce vehicle traffic entering the airport.

  • Officials say the increase is about valuing access to a multi‑billion dollar airport investment, not a passenger tax.

  • Context includes comparisons to fee levels at other airports and prior Skylink delays due to contractor disputes.

  • This would be the first access-fee change at LAX in a decade, with opponents citing insufficient public process and broader impacts on transportation costs in California.

  • LAWA approved the fee hike for private transportation companies serving LAX, including Uber, Lyft, taxis, and limousines, with the board set to vote on the changes.

  • Some travelers are considering hotel shuttles or asking friends for pickups as workarounds to higher costs.

  • Officials project first-year revenue from the fee increase could reach up to $100 million once Skylink becomes operational.

Summary based on 2 sources


Get a daily email with more US News stories

More Stories