Community Transit is here to get you where you want to go. We are proud to be a part of the Edmonds community — we live here, ride here, and drive here. Wherever you need to go in Edmonds, feel good about how you get there.
When you ride Community Transit in Edmonds, enjoy scenic waterfronts, vibrant downtowns, and easy connections to light rail. People traveling to and within Edmonds can choose from multiple routes served by Community Transit buses, including Swift Blue Line and Swift Orange Line bus rapid transit.
Other local transit options include a ferry station with regular ferries running between Edmonds and Kingston, the Sounder Train, Sound Transit buses, DART paratransit service, and Vanpool. Edmonds Ferry Terminal, Edmonds College Transit Center, Edmonds Park & Ride, Swamp Creek Park & Ride, Lynnwood City Center Station, and Mountlake Terrace Transit Center serve as nearby transit hubs. Local bike trails in Snohomish County also offer pedestrian and bike-friendly travel options.
Enjoy seamless connections to light rail to get to Seattle and beyond.
Light rail connectionsNew to Community Transit? We can help you get moving.
How to ride the busLearn all the ways to pay your fare using an ORCA card and more.
Learn about fares & passesCome explore the idyllic city of Edmonds, Washington‘s first Certified Creative District. Catch a Community Transit bus downtown to explore the rich art scene and extensive dining and retail options. Explore the picturesque waterfront and connect to regional transit via the ferry or Sounder Train.
Snohomish County, Wash. – Arlington City Council Member Jan Schuette was selected by her peers this week to serve as chair of the Community Transit Board of Directors for 2023. A former Stanwood High School principal, Schuette was elected to the Arlington City Council in 2013 and has served on the Community Transit board since 2016.
Snohomish City Council Member Tom Merrill was selected as board vice chair and Stanwood Mayor Sid Roberts was selected as secretary.
Snohomish County Council Member Megan Dunn was recently named as an alternate to the CT board by the county.
Former Community Transit board chair and Lake Stevens City Council Member Kim Daughtry was selected as PSRC policy board representative. Schuette was named PRSC alternate representative.
The Community Transit board is comprised of nine elected officials from Snohomish County and the cities within the transit agency’s service district, as well as a labor representative selected by the agency’s bargaining units.
Community Transit Board members include:
Community Transit Board Alternates include:
Community Transit is responsible for providing bus and paratransit service, vanpool and alternative commute options in Snohomish County. The agency is building a network of Swift bus rapid transit lines with the Swift Blue Line along Highway 99, Swift Green Line between Canyon Park/Bothell and Boeing/Paine Field, and Swift Orange Line coming to Mill Creek and Lynnwood in 2024.