Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Streetsblog

How Sprawl Hits Atlanta Residents Right in the Wallet

Atlanta's so sprawling, most people have no choice but to spend a lot of their hard-earned money and precious time driving. Image via ATL Urbanist
Atlanta's so sprawling, most people have no choice but to spend a lot of their hard-earned money and precious time driving. Image via ATL Urbanist
false

There's no shortage of good reasons to drive less, but maybe the most compelling personal incentive is that it can save you a ton of money.

Unfortunately, in a lot of places, making major changes to your travel habits is not that simple. Darin at ATL Urbanist says that in his city, most people are essentially trapped in a system that undermines their financial well being:

$9,253 — that’s the average annual savings for someone in Metro Atlanta who, according to this new APTA report, gives up a car and switches to public transit. The savings is based on the assumption that a person in a two-person household lives with one less car.

Here’s a BIG asterisk for that dollar amount: the Atlanta region is so heavily dominated by car-centric sprawl that there are many here who might like to save this money and make the switch to transit, but can’t.

As I’ve written before, the transit agencies in this region struggle to provide efficient service to people because of the way the built environment sprawls out. The homes, stores, offices, schools, recreation -- it’s all laid out in a fashion that is navigable primarily by personal cars.

So if you’re looking for yet another reason to urge leaders and governments in the Atlanta region to stop the sprawling and focus new developments in a more compact, walkable format, here it is: people here could save thousands of dollars a year if we didn’t have to own cars to get around for every trip.

Elsewhere on the Network today: This Old City explains the problems with Philadelphia's reliance on "spot zoning" to make way for big new developments. And The City Fix reports that Brasilia has a new policy that allows women to chose exactly where they will get off the bus at night.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Moped Rider Killed by Ambulance Driver

A man on two wheels was killed.

February 2, 2026

Forget Free Buses: Mayor Mamdani Should Instead Seek ‘Audacious’ Subway Expansion

The same billion-dollar outlay that Mayor Mamdani hopes to allocate for fare-free buses should be spent instead on rewriting the subway map.

February 2, 2026

Monday’s Headlines: Spotlight on ICE and Ice Edition

The snow continued to give newsmen and women plenty to work on all weekend — and revealed cracks in Mayor Mamdani's icy resolve. Plus other news.

February 2, 2026

On The Road: Delivery Workers Face Scary Trips, Minimal Tips, App Tricks

Delivery workers continue to brave icy roads, freezing temperatures and low tips as Mayor Mamdani vows to help make their jobs less "relentless."

February 1, 2026

The Streetsblog Angle: The 70th Street Bike Lane Is In the Epstein Files!

Somewhere, maybe, Woody Allen finally regrets opposing that bike lane.

January 30, 2026

The Mamdani Effect: Three Delivery Apps Must Pay $5M In Minimum Pay Settlement

A new era: Mayor Mamdani's worker protection department announces new enforcement against UberEats, HungryPanda, and Fantuan for not complying with the minimum pay law.

January 30, 2026
See all posts