This study examines key factors influencing the use of feeder buses for routine (e.g., work, school) and non-routine (e.g., leisure, visits) trips in South Tangerang City, Indonesia. Using stated preference surveys with 15- and 30-minute travel time-saving scenarios and binary logistic regression, the study finds that mode choice is shaped by current transport mode, cost, access time, and parking availability. For routine trips, discomfort during crowding and waiting time also matter. Mode-shift probabilities were 37%–51.7% for routine and 31%–45% for non-routine trips. The results support targeted Travel Demand Management strategies that consider trip purpose and improve public transport adoption.
Hendra et al. (Wed,) studied this question.