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Home » Los Angeles LAX » My First Experience With “LAXit” (New LAX Ridesharing System)
Los Angeles LAX

My First Experience With “LAXit” (New LAX Ridesharing System)

Matthew Klint Posted onNovember 23, 2019November 14, 2023 22 Comments

I finally had the chance check out the new LAXit ridesharing system at Los Angeles International Airport after a recent trip. It was annoying, but not nearly as bad as I was expecting.

I arrived into LAX around 9:00PM, which is a peak time for departures but a somewhat more quiet time for arrivals. Stepping out onto the curb on the arrivals level, I noticed a pillar painted green with a round “LAXit Shuttle Stop” sign.

a sign with a picture of a bus on it

a green sign on a pole

Two men wearing green polo shirts were stationed to answer questions. A crowd of about 10 was waiting and we were informed a shuttle would arrive shortly. Well, shuttle after shuttle drove by, but none stopped for us. The easily-recognizable new LAXit shuttles are painted neon green, and most had very few people on them.

a group of people standing in a parking lot

I was told that each pair of terminals is sent their own shuttle (1/2, 3/4, TBIT, 5/6, 7/8). That makes sense in theory — imagine if every shuttle started in Terminal 1 and had to make its away around the horseshoe-shaped terminal structure at LAX. The shuttle would likely fill up before it reached terminals 6, 7, 0r 8. Plus, it would simply take too long.

But we still had to wait 15 minutes for a bus. That is unacceptable. The crowd had grown to 25 people by the time the shuttle finally arrived. If needed, the staff in green will help you load your bags onto the bus. Tips are not accepted.

a green bus in a terminal

We made the 7-minute trip to the rideharing/taxi lot, which is located adjacent to Terminal 1.

a green and black bus

You step off the bus in the center row, which is designated for taxis. The row closest to Terminal 1 is for Uber and Opoli while the third row is for Lyft.

a group of people standing on a sidewalk with umbrellas and cars

a blue sign with white text

a group of people standing in front of a fence with white tents

a group of yellow taxi cabs in a parking lot

Lyft was about $8 cheaper than Uber, so I chose that. I had no wait for a driver. There were about one dozen lined up. I simply presented my code, it was inputted by the driver, and I was soon on my way. That could not have been easier.

a sign on a street

a man walking with luggage in a white tent

a man standing in front of a row of cars

a screenshot of a phone

CONCLUSION

Overall, the process was smoother than I thought. Still, keeping passengers waiting for 15 minutes (some longer) before a shuttle arrives is too long. But the lot itself was well-organized and easy to navigate.

By the way, 121pilot recently shared about a way to save big on Uber or Lyft during a period of surge pricing. Since there was no surge pricing while I was there, the prices on-site or off-site were nearly identical.

> Read More: How To Save Big On Uber And Lyft At LAX
> Read More: “LAXit” Will Expand After Rough First Week

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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22 Comments

  1. derek Reply
    November 23, 2019 at 2:31 pm

    Some terminal pairs are less crowded. For example, 7/8 is really just 7 and they get one shuttle line.

    Terminal 3 and 4 are far apart. Terminal 3 (Delta, previously TWA and Alaska) is near 1/2 and far from 4 (AA). If you don’t want to wait and think all terminal pairs have equal number of buses assigned, then go to Terminal 3.

    In Las Vegas, they have a shortage of rental car center buses. At the rental car center going to the airport, there are far more T1 buses than T3. Look at the line. If they are roughly the same or T1 is slightly longer, use the T1 line. You have to lie to the attendants who insist on knowing “what airline?”

  2. Donald Reply
    November 23, 2019 at 3:36 pm

    On most days or nights I’ve waited longer than 22 minutes (your combined bus wait and ride length) for my Uber to arrive. Waiting for the green bus sucks, but I like the system now.

    Good review and photos though. It shows people that the system really has improved since it started. And the few times I’ve been picked up by private car have been so much faster.

    (I’m sure over Thanksgiving weekend there will be lots of new stories and blogs about how terrible LAX-it is….and how long the wait times were, but that’s an impossible situation and not typical anymore.)

  3. Angela Reply
    November 23, 2019 at 4:28 pm

    Is the rideharing/taxi lot connected to Terminal 1 through any walkable pathways?

    • MJM Reply
      November 23, 2019 at 8:38 pm

      Surely can walk there outside on sidewalk from T-1 baggage claim. Go outside and turn left and cross one set of streets and it will be on your left . . . unless they made it so there is no entrance from the sidewalk but that would be dumb. They took our Park-One parking lot to make LAX-it. Always walked from Park-One to/from T-1.

    • Surfer Reply
      November 24, 2019 at 12:13 am

      No, you have to outside on the ground level.

  4. Bob Reply
    November 23, 2019 at 4:47 pm

    I like when Lyft uses the code. This makes things move much more quickly. I wish all airports using Lyft would adopt this same code method. It really works!

  5. mojo Reply
    November 23, 2019 at 5:56 pm

    LAX-it stole my Park N’ Fly lot, and I want it back 🙁

    • MJM Reply
      November 23, 2019 at 8:33 pm

      Me too.

    • Shawn Reply
      November 23, 2019 at 9:44 pm

      Grrr!!! Agreed. I’m not happy about it. Is the Park N’ Fly lot totally gone?

      • mojo Reply
        November 23, 2019 at 11:54 pm

        Only some long-term parked cars remain. Lot has been swallowed-up by LAX-it.

    • BLB Reply
      November 24, 2019 at 3:13 am

      Two weeks ago I waited 25 minutes for a shuttle from Bradley to the lot. It was chaos. Elderly people struggled with bags. Non-English speakers were confused. Driver was painfully slow. Took 40 minutes from curb to cab. Taxi drivers hate the new arrangement. Me, too.

  6. Shawn Reply
    November 23, 2019 at 9:49 pm

    I recently return to southern California on an IAH-ONT flight instead of IAH-LAX, which is more typical. I did this for two reasons: 1) I specifically wanted to avoid the whole LAX-it mess and 2) I figured that the upgrade possibilities were better flying IAH-ONT, even though I would be traveling on a United Embraer-175.

    Well, reason #2 was justified. I … didn’t do so well with regards to reason #1. There was no Uber at ONT that evening for reasons that I don’t understand, and my taxi ride home was over $100!!! (The excessive fare should be reimbursed, but still …) Looks like I’ll have to suck it up and embrace LAX-it. Just someone please tell me that walking to the LAX-it lot is still feasible!

    • MJM Reply
      November 23, 2019 at 10:43 pm

      LA Times November 6 article has a quote from someone who walked to the LAX-it lot from T-1.

      • CCRyder Reply
        November 26, 2019 at 3:53 pm

        THANKS! Found the quote and is helpful as I want to walk from T1 to LAXit

        Barbara Najar, 44, who was returning from a trip to Las Vegas, said she knew about the complaints regarding the new pickup system before coming to L.A. Najar walked the short distance between Terminal 1 and the pickup lot and ordered her Uber from there.

        “It was actually fine — super-organized,” she said, and it was better than “running around in circles” looking for a ride.

    • Chase Reply
      November 24, 2019 at 12:31 am

      Uber is boycotting ONT pick ups for the time being due to ONT getting greedy and upping the fee for ridesharing companies. The argument is why should there be a fee equal to the one levied at major airports like LAX (with huge infrastructure implications) for an airport the size of ONT. Lyft accepted the fee increase, however.

      The workaround for Uber at ONT is to just take the rental car shuttle and walk a few steps to the PUBLIC street in front of the rental car center.

  7. SO_CAL_RETAIL_SLUT Reply
    November 24, 2019 at 12:10 am

    @Amanda, you can walk fairly easy from Terminal 1 to the LAX-it area. It should take no more than 3 minutes, using the ground floor level and crossing one street. I believe this is the fastest way to go – as you don’t have to wait for a shuttle to drive around a portion of LAX before arriving at the LAX-it lot.

    @mojo, I agree with you! I miss the former Park N’ Fly lot! Now, PNF sends you over to Wally Park, which is a pain in the …

    SO_CAL_RETAIL_SLUT

  8. Reinier Nissen Reply
    November 24, 2019 at 3:06 pm

    I was there two weeks ago at midnight and it was over 90 minutes and $75 from United baggage claim to downtown LA. I walked to the lot in 10 mins and the rest was waiting. They would not let my driver go into the lane the App told him to go into. The guy next to me had an Uber coming from Orange county and arriving in 52 minutes. I talked to a security guard that was waiting for his ride. He said he gets off at midnight and got a Lyft Line for the last few months and was home by 1230 and spent about $8. He said he now gets home after 1am and spends almost $20. My driver told me that he took a rider to the same hotel he was taking me to and the ride cost $137 and he got to keep $97.

    It seemed to do the same to traffic as SFO the first time I departed from LAX. From the freeway offramp to terminal 4 was around 5 mins. I was willing to accept this setup in exchange for a less congested airport. That was short-lived because the next time I flew out of LAX two days later, it was backed up just as bad as before. It was surprising that it would have been that bad on a Thursday evening. Took 30 mins from freeway/tunnel to terminal 4.

  9. EatSeeGo Reply
    November 24, 2019 at 3:58 pm

    When did you request your Lyft ride? While waiting for the shuttle? Once on the shuttle? After getting off the shuttle?

    • Matthew Reply
      November 24, 2019 at 4:57 pm

      After arriving at the lot. But I was monitoring wait times the entire time.

  10. Diane Reply
    December 2, 2019 at 5:03 pm

    I tried LA Xit Sunday after Thanksgiving. I was flying with 3 kids. Overall it was a TERRIBLE experience.
    -No one would help us with our bags onto the green bus (can’t imagine how anyone physically disabled or elderly could handle it)
    – Green bus was packed like sardines
    – The wait for Uber was >1 hour, Lyft was 20-30 minutes, but taxis were 15 minutes. We elected for the taxi but it was freezing wait for over 20 minutes , then driver would only accept cash (who carries that anymore?)
    – Overall it cost double, was inconvenient & stressful. And traffic still sucked.

  11. Pingback: The Most Punctual Airport, Another Mandatory Hotel Fee, What New Airport Ridesharing Program Is Like, & More! - Your Mileage May Vary
  12. Pingback: BREAKING: LAX Rideshare Lot Buses Catch Fire, Causing Delays and Backing Up Traffic - Renés Points

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