Metro buses revealed as alternative to axed stage 4 light rail

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Greg Sutherland

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Jun 21, 2026, 11:00:51 PM (13 days ago) Jun 21
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https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-06-22/metro-buses-alternative-to-axed-stage-four-light-rail-gold-coast/106825972


Metro buses revealed as alternative to axed stage 4 light rail

Artist graphic of metro style bus on a bridge over water

An artist impression has been released, but costs, specific route and means of delivery are yet to be determined. (Supplied: Queensland government)

In short:

The Queensland government has announced its Gold Coast Transport Plan, unveiling metro-style buses as the best service option to connect southern suburbs.

The cost, exact route and means of delivery are yet to be decided, with a detailed plan to be conducted.

What's next?

The project is promised to be completed in time for the Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games.

Metro-style buses, coined the "Gold Coast Surfer", will ferry passengers from Coolangatta to Burleigh Heads and west to Robina, under the Queensland government's Gold Coast Transport Plan.

The plan is the government's alternative to the axed stage 4 light rail plan, following community opposition nine months ago.

Premier David Crisafulli said the "generational infrastructure" was reflecting the feedback from those on the southern Gold Coast.

"We are delivering infrastructure for a growing state to protect the lifestyle of the people already here," he said.

"[This] means better public transport from Robina to the Gold Coast airport. That's generational infrastructure, and that's a plan for growth for this city."

Queensland premier wearing a high-viz vest at a press conference.

David Crisafulli says the announcement shows the government is listening to locals. (ABC News)

Services to run every 10 minutes

The pitch to service the region with metro-style buses is promised to be completed ahead of the Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games.

Under the plan, buses will run every 10 minutes from south-east Queensland's most southern point, heading north through Palm Beach and Burleigh Heads, as well as west to Varsity Lakes and Robina.

Transport Minister Brent Mickelberg said a detailed design process would now be undertaken, including determining the means of delivery.

He would not be drawn on whether that would limit traffic on existing roads, which were often congested.

"[Metro-style services], 10-minute headways … that will be a game changer," Mr Mickelberg said. 

"This is about delivering a genuine alternative to getting in the car.

"This is a game changer for the Gold Coast, and we are getting on with the job of delivering the infrastructure," he said.

Man in suit looks off to the side

Tom Tate says he will still support building light rail stage four in future. (ABC News: Glenn Mullane)

Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate, who previously indicated his support for stage 4 light rail, has expressed his support for the initiative.  

"Time will tell if it's the best solution for the city. As Gold Coaster's we should remain open-minded," he said.

"All in all, it's a good day for the Gold Coast."

Cr Tate said he had consulted on the project three months ago, and that the announcement was only one portion of the Gold Coast Transport Plan.

He said he would leave future announcements up to the state government.

Costs yet to be announced

The government cited enormous costs in its decision to scrap stage 4, with the project estimated to cost as much as $10 billion.

The cost to deliver the Gold Coast Surfer has not yet been specified.

Night time photo of light rail stopped at lit up station

With the southern leg scrapped, the government will broaden the northern leg with new stops in several suburbs. (ABC News: Greg Nelson)

David Janetzki said a record $55.9 billion would be tipped into the Transport and Main Roads budget to deliver better roads and rail for all Queenslanders.

A "spur line" off the existing light rail will see the corridor in the north extended from Gold Coast University Hospital to Harbour Town.


Richard Youl

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Jun 22, 2026, 12:04:56 AM (13 days ago) Jun 22
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What would you expect from a tram hating Liberal government? The Harbourtown extension is no more than a cheap sop which, being a branch, will be operationally difficult even if just a shuttle of about 4km.

Richard

On 22 Jun 2026, at 1:00 pm, 'Greg Sutherland' via TramsDownUnder <tramsdo...@googlegroups.com> wrote:


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Mal Rowe

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Jun 22, 2026, 1:45:31 AM (13 days ago) Jun 22
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On 22/06/2026 13:00, 'Greg Sutherland' via TramsDownUnder wrote

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-06-22/metro-buses-alternative-to-axed-stage-four-light-rail-gold-coast/106825972

It will be interesting to see what the capacity of these buses will be in terms of people with luggage.

Mal Rowe in a city with just buses and motor cars serving a large airport

TP

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Jun 22, 2026, 5:16:30 AM (12 days ago) Jun 22
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A bit of misleading language in the coverage here. The "metro-like" buses would be referring to the Brisbane "Metro" double artic buses. These are illegal on the road in the eastern states under the NHVR regulations and are only allowed on the Brisbane busways because they're entirely isolated from operating on public roads. The academic quoted seems to think they are double artics because he referred to them having half the capacity of Gold Coast trams. 

So the "metro-like" reference would be to conventional artics, which have a capacity of about 110, or not much more than a third of the capacity of the Gold Coast trams. So, if you have a packed tram arriving Broadbeach South and everybody wanting to be carried on, you need three artics to collect from each tram. So at 7.5 minute interval trams you need buses less than every 2.5 minutes. For 15 minute interval trams, you need buses every 5 minutes.

Good luck with all that.

Tony P
(who has casually observed over the years that buses can't do the job of trams)

David McLoughlin

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Jun 23, 2026, 9:54:48 PM (11 days ago) Jun 23
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"[Metro-style services], 10-minute headways … that will be a game changer," Mr Mickelberg said. "This is about delivering a genuine alternative to getting in the car."

The Gold Coast has plenty of buses already. A few more rather than the tram extension is not an alternative to a car.

I suspect the tram extension will eventually happen. The mayor still supports it.
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