There are two backdoor ways to find this information. The Met Council publishes ons/offs of every stop for every route they are responsible for. You can take the spreadsheet they provide and then create a pivot table. Filter by Weekday, Rows should be the routes, and the use the sum of Ons. This is a rough estimate and the metadata states you shouldn't use the data this way but it can give you a rough answer. Latest data is fall 2022. Next release is likely in spring 2024 for the fall 2023 data. Suburban transit agencies aren't usually included.There is or was a way to look up very detailed info on individual routes, even stops IIRC. If someone can explain that again I'd like to know as well. The link was posted and referenced a few years back I think.Does anyone know how to get data on specific Route numbers for the "regular" bus?
https://gisdata.mn.gov/dataset/us-mn-st ... alightings
The Met Council releases a report on Regional Route Performance and looks at subsidy among other things. It includes annual ridership data by service day which you could divide by the number of weekdays in a year (usually 255). I don't know how accurate this method is either. The subsidy metric is complicated as there is disagreement among the agencies on how to define subsidies and costs. You can see Southwest Transit's dial-a-ride number is particularly suspect. The latest data is from 2021.
https://metrocouncil.org/Transportation ... urce=child
Or maybe someone can do a public records request.