Buses are operated by private companies, with early morning, late evening, Sunday and rural services often supported by Metro. There is a special rural bus section, which promotes a combination of minor local links and major long-distance routes. On 1 April 1974, the West Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive was created by merging the municipal bus fleets of
Bradford City Transport,
Leeds City Transport,
Huddersfield Corporation Passenger Transport and
Halifax Joint Omnibus Committee, which earlier in the 1970s took over the Todmorden Joint Omnibus Committee. The operation was divided into four districts and a new livery of cream and green, officially termed 'Verona green and buttermilk', was introduced, replacing Bradford's light blue and cream, Huddersfield's red and cream, Leeds' two-tone green and Halifax's orange, green & cream. Created following the
Local Government Act 1972, the Executive had to operate within the policy guidelines of the County Council Public Transport Committee, coordinating the operation of all public transport in the county. The Executive inherited approximately 1,500 buses along with 6,000 staff and the associated garages and street furniture. The Executive relinquished ownership of local buses following the
Transport Act 1985, creating arms-length operating companies. It continued to coordinate public transport as the West Yorkshire Passenger Transport Authority when the metropolitan county was abolished in 1986. New buses were purchased in large numbers at the outset. In 1976 Baddeley Brothers of
Holmfirth was purchased providing the PTE with additional coaching and stage-carriage duties. In 1980 the Baddeley Brothers business was also disposed of, although the Metrocoach operation was retained.
Fleet livery s in Leeds in August 1979 In 1976 modifications were made to the livery. Originally there were three stripes at the sides of the destination box, which wrapped round to the sides and swept down. This took time to apply, and a trial was made with one thin line. In 1977 the lines were removed and the green area at the skirting of was raised up, so there was slightly more green. The other change was the fleet name to MetroBus in 1976, removing the district names. On 25 April 1977, the PTE acquired the old-established
Kinsley based United Services from WR & P Bingley. As well as providing the PTE with more coaching operations, this took it into an area of West Yorkshire where it had previously had no presence. United Services was maintained as a separate subsidiary and retained its distinctive blue livery, whilst a new livery of red & ivory was adopted for the PTE's coaches, which operated under the "Metrocoach" banner, with brown added for "Metrocoach Executive". Later Bingley's depot received double-deckers transferred from the Leeds District. In early 1981 a reorganisation of operating districts was implemented with the East District becoming responsible for the
Leeds depots and United Services, whilst the West District took control of
Bradford,
Halifax,
Todmorden and
Huddersfield.
New integrated bus system In July 1981, MetroBus and the
National Bus Company (NBC) formed a new integrated transport system known as the "Metro-National Transport Company Limited". All PTE and NBC buses began to appear with a new emblem, which consisted of the MetroBus WY's in one box and the NBC "double N" or "N-blem" appearing in another to the right of the PTE emblem, and slightly lower. The boxes were linked to show the integration. They also appeared with MetroBus fleetnames with "
The easy way from here to there in West Yorkshire". The new "Metrobus" fleetname being applied not only to PTE owned vehicles on which WYPTE lettering was carried beneath the fleet name, but also buses of NBC subsidiaries
West Yorkshire Road Car Company,
West Riding Automobile Company, Yorkshire Woollen Transport Company and
Yorkshire Traction, carrying "West Yorkshire", "West Riding", "Yorkshire" and "Yorkshire Traction" names below the Metrobus name. Some years later some of those buses (excluding Yorkshire Traction) were repainted into the PTEs verona cream and buttermilk livery so as to present a corporate image. From this date the "WY" logo on the front of buses was replaced by the "Metro-National" emblem in mid-1983, to celebrate 100 years of public transport in Huddersfield, MetroBus paint two vehicles in old liveries:
Leyland Atlanteans carried Huddersfield Corporation red livery and
Huddersfield Corporation Tramways livery. They became "Building on a Great Tradition" vehicles and were in those liveries until the late 1990s.
Deregulation in Leeds in August 1993
Deregulation occurred on 26 October 1986. The WYPTE bus division was renamed
Yorkshire Rider and with it a new livery of dark olive green and cream and a stylised "YR" emblem. Five double-decker buses were operated in each of the municipal council's colours (already included were the two Huddersfield buses), with words on the sides between the decks saying "Building on a Great Tradition". The bus services and fare/bus pass/timetables division was renamed Metro.
'My bus' school bus services school bus in
Keighley in March 2025
My bus is a
school bus service launched in November 2004 by West Yorkshire Metro with certain features which set it apart from normal
school transport services in the United Kingdom: • A dedicated fleet of school buses (rather than ordinary
transit buses or
coaches borrowed from other duties); additional use of these vehicles is limited to school and young-person focused activities and all have low floors and seat belts • Drivers with enhanced
DBS checks, who permanently assigned to each route, assisted on some routes by volunteer escorts • A bus seat is permanently assigned to each student • In-school education campaigns to support the service The service, using a fleet of up to 200 specialist buses produced by
BMC and
Blue Bird, each painted yellow with coordinated
My bus branding and fitted to a 3+2 seating configuration with seatbelts as standard, gained significant mode shift: 64% of primary school users were previously driven by car. Under this scheme, these buses were not allowed to be used for non-school purposes. West Yorkshire Metro claims benefits from 'My bus' range from reductions in car use, traffic congestion, air pollution, traffic accidents,
social exclusion,
truancy and late student arrivals and improvements to education, safety for pedestrians and cyclists,
integration of people with special needs and children's experiences of public transport. and reviews undertaken by the West Yorkshire Combined Authority saw 'My bus' services to primary schools in
Ilkley and
Bradford withdrawn between 2023 and 2025.
Current operators As of 2012 the following companies are owned by WYPTE, subject to Metro conditions and ticketing: •
Metroconnect Accessbus in WYPTE Area. ==Rail service==