24/06/2026
💰 The argument against bike lanes is always about money. The numbers say that argument is backwards. 🚴♀️
Whenever a city proposes protected cycle lanes, you hear the same complaint. Too expensive. A waste of public money. A vanity project for a handful of cyclists.
Here's the inconvenient truth: protected bike lanes are one of the best-value investments a transport budget can make. And there's now hard data to prove it.
A major study from the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy, backed by the FIA Foundation, ran the numbers on two cities that went all-in on protected networks. The findings are difficult to argue with.
Take Bogotá, Colombia. Its protected lane network cost around $132 million to build.
The benefits it generates? Roughly $310 million. Every single year.
That figure comes from real, measurable things - the travel time people save, and the cost of around 300 premature deaths prevented annually. One year of benefits outweighs the entire cost of construction.
Guangzhou, China told the same story. A network that cost about $69 million to build returns an estimated $105 million a year.
In plain terms: these networks pay for themselves in under a year.
And it gets harder to ignore. Per dollar spent, protected bike lanes delivered roughly ten times more emissions reduction than building metro rail. Ten times. For a fraction of the price.
A quick, honest caveat - those payback figures compare one year of benefits against build cost, and they come from specific cities. They're not a magic guarantee that works identically everywhere. But the scale of the gap is the point. This isn't close.
There's a knock-on effect too, and it lands where critics least expect it: local business.
When New York added a protected lane on 9th Avenue, retail sales along it jumped 49 percent. The wider area managed just 3 percent over the same period.
Turns out that when you make a street safer and more pleasant to move through slowly, more people stop, linger, and spend. Cars passing at 30 miles an hour don't shop. People on foot and on bikes do.
So the next time someone tells you protected lanes are a luxury a city can't afford, it's worth asking the harder question.
Can a city actually afford to keep ignoring them?
Safer streets. Cleaner air. Stronger local economies. And a build cost that, on the best evidence we have, can pay for itself within a year.
For cities still treating cycle lanes as a nuisance to be tolerated, the data is sending a fairly blunt message. This isn't charity for cyclists. It's one of the smartest bets a transport budget can make.