unitrans — GTFS Transit Data for United States

Active
Unitrans United States March 30, 2026 — August 2, 2026

About This Feed

The unitrans GTFS feed by Unitrans provides structured public transit data for United States, covering 22 routes and 275 stops operated by 1 transit agencies. Formatted in the General Transit Feed Specification (GTFS) standard, this dataset is ready for integration with transit apps, routing engines, and urban planning tools.

Valid from March 30, 2026 to August 2, 2026. Suitable for production use in transit applications, GTFS editors, and GTFS-RT integrations.

Data is automatically validated and corrected. View our quality pipeline →

Transit map showing unitrans routes and stops in United States
Explore 22 routes, 275 stops, 1 agencies

Browse routes, stops, and agencies from this specific feed. Public pages show merged data from all feeds — sign in to access per-feed breakdowns useful for GTFS integration and debugging.

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Download Data

Enhanced & Validated Recommended

Updated 2026-05-04

Cleaned, corrected, and validated against GTFS specifications. View corrections.

ZIP GTFS Feed — Corrected & Enriched
0.4 MB
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The license for this work is not specified Content Hash: 38c2caab135f2703747e5614403a66b782ffadac
ZIP Validation Report
0.01 MB
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40Errors
0Warnings
0Info
Top Issues
block trips with overlapping stop times40
GeoJSON GeoJSON Data
0.01 MB
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Original Source

Obtained 2026-04-23

Unmodified GTFS data from official sources. May contain errors or inconsistencies.

ZIP GTFS Source Data
0.39 MB
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Source: Official download The license for this work is not specified Content Hash: d524c90a2a965ac5515c6b6f3f633a08a87e20ff
ZIP Validation Report
0.01 MB
Download
0Errors
63Warnings
23Info
Top Issues
unused shape46
stop without stop time17
unknown column23
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Frequently Asked Questions

What is GTFS data?

General Transit Feed Specification (GTFS) is an open data format for public transit schedules and geographic information. Created by Google and TriMet, it defines a common format for transit agencies to publish their data, enabling developers to build interoperable transit applications, trip planners, and mobility analytics tools.

What is the difference between enhanced and source data?

Source data is the original GTFS feed obtained directly from the transit agency or official provider. The enhanced version has been processed by our team to fix common errors, remove inconsistencies, and ensure compliance with GTFS specifications. We recommend using the enhanced version for production applications.

Can I use this data in my application?

Data usage depends on the license specified by the original provider. Check the license information in the download section above. Many GTFS feeds are published under open data licenses that allow free use with attribution. Always verify the license terms before integrating data into your project.

How do I validate a GTFS feed?

Each feed includes a validation report that documents errors and warnings. You can also use tools like the MobilityData GTFS Validator to independently validate the data. Our enhanced feeds have already been processed to resolve the most critical validation issues.

All data on this site is sourced from publicly available sources. If you believe a file has been posted in error or an incorrect license has been attributed, please contact us.