More than a billion Hopper journeys have made on a bus or tram since the scheme was introduced in September 2016.
Figures show how effective Hopper fares have been since their introduction, reaching a total 1,005,000 hopper fare journeys.
Elly Baker, London Assembly Labour spokesperson for transport, has said the figures demonstrate the success of the scheme, saving Londoners £1.75 each time they do not have to pay a second bus fare.
In the last year, Londoners’ savings equate to more than £300 million over 176 million journeys.
Hopper fares allow passengers unlimited free transfers between buses and trams if they touch on within an hour. The scheme was introduced by London Mayor Sadiq Khan so those who change buses to get to their destination are not charged more than those with a direct route.
Transport for London has maintained over 100 million journeys a year every full year since its introduction except for 20/21, when it fell to 80 million journeys due to the pandemic.
As well as the Hopper fare, the Mayor of London has frozen fares on TfL to save Londoners money and has piloted “off-peak Fridays”, in which all journeys on a Friday are charged at an off-peak rate.