Q: I ride Everett Transit or Community Transit today. What actually changes for me if the merger goes through?
A: If you live inside Everett city limits and use the bus, four practical things change after the Everett Transit → Community Transit annexation is approved and phased in: (1) one agency, one fare structure, one app, one schedule for every bus you ride inside the city; (2) your sales tax rate on purchases in Everett goes up by roughly 0.6 percentage points, reflecting Community Transit’s 1.2% transit tax replacing Everett Transit’s ~0.6%; (3) existing Everett Transit passes will be honored during an approximately one-year transition per public statements from both agencies; (4) route changes inside Everett will be evaluated as part of Community Transit’s regular service change cycle — potentially more coverage from the higher tax base, potentially some consolidation where Everett Transit and Community Transit routes already overlap.
The rider’s cheat sheet
Today: Two agencies. Everett Transit runs local Everett routes and some downtown circulators. Community Transit runs Swift BRT, commuter buses to Seattle and Lynnwood, and the rest of Snohomish County’s network. After the merger: One agency. Community Transit operates all of it. Your OneBusAway, your ORCA tap, your transfer from a Swift Blue Line bus to a local Everett route — all in one system.
What happens to your pass
Both agencies have publicly committed to honoring existing Everett Transit fare media during the transition. The interlocal agreement (the legal document the two agencies are drafting through summer 2026) will spell out exactly how long. Expect a unified Community Transit fare structure to phase in over approximately a year after the agreement is signed. If you buy monthly, watch for official notice before making your next annual commitment.
Your bus route, specifically
Everett Transit routes 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 12, 18, 29, and 70 are the most likely to be reviewed for integration with neighboring Community Transit service. Some may keep their current alignment under new numbers. Some may consolidate with overlapping Community Transit routes. And some may actually expand frequency or span of service — the stated goal from both the mayor and the Community Transit CEO is to grow service using the higher sales tax revenue, not cut it. Specific route decisions happen in the interlocal agreement and the first post-merger service change cycle.
The sales tax change
Inside Everett city limits, the transit portion of sales tax would rise from ~0.6% to 1.2% — a 0.6-point increase. On a $100 purchase in Everett, that is an extra $0.60. On a $25,000 car purchase, that is an extra $150. It does not apply to groceries, prescription medication, or most services. It does apply to most retail and restaurant transactions inside the city.
Why this isn’t going to your ballot
The 2025 state law (amended in 2026) that made this pathway available treats transit annexation as a government-to-government action between two PTBAs (Public Transportation Benefit Areas). The legal trigger is a public hearing plus approval from both boards, not a voter referendum. If you want to weigh in, the public hearing(s) — expected in the September to October window at City Hall and at Community Transit board meetings — are the formal venue. Council member contact information is on everettwa.gov.
What to do now if you’re a rider
Keep riding. Nothing changes until the interlocal agreement is signed, which is targeted for late 2026, and then the phase-in takes roughly another year. Watch for official service change notices from Everett Transit and Community Transit, sign up for Community Transit’s rider alerts, and if you have strong feelings about specific Everett Transit routes, attend the public hearings when they are scheduled.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will Swift bus rapid transit change?
No. Swift is already Community Transit and continues as-is.
Will my commuter bus to Seattle change?
Sound Transit Express buses and future Everett Link light rail are operated by Sound Transit, a separate regional agency, and are not part of this annexation.
Will fares go up right away?
No. Existing Everett Transit fare media will be honored during transition per public statements from both agencies. A unified Community Transit fare structure will phase in over approximately one year after the agreement is signed.
Will routes inside my Everett neighborhood be cut?
Not automatically. Route decisions happen in the interlocal agreement and the first post-merger service change cycle. Both the mayor and Community Transit CEO have publicly stated the goal is service expansion funded by the higher sales tax — not cuts. The public hearings in the fall are where specific neighborhoods can weigh in.
Do I pay more in property tax?
No. This is a sales tax change inside Everett city limits only, not a property tax measure.
Related coverage
See the complete 2026 Everett Transit merger guide, our original coverage of the April 22 announcement, and our resident guide to Everett’s 2027 budget deficit.
Related Coverage From Tygart Media’s Exploring Everett Series
- The Everett Transit Merger Into Community Transit: Complete 2026 Guide
- For Boeing and Paine Field Commuters: What the 2026 Everett Transit Merger With Community Transit Means for Your Drive to Work
- Everett Transit Is Merging Into Community Transit: What Yesterday’s Announcement Actually Changes for Riders
- Boeing 777X Clears FAA Phase 4A: What Everett’s Biggest Certification Milestone in Years Actually Means
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