Daredevils now riding a new wave by standing on top of NYC buses in twist on deadly subway surfing trend

Screenshot of kid standing atop a moving bus, screenshot of kid crouching on a moving bus.
Screenshot of kid standing atop a moving bus, screenshot of kid crouching on a moving bus.

These daredevils are riding a new wave.

Adrenaline junkies are now surfing atop Big Apple buses barreling down major thoroughfares — a new twist on the deadly transit trend of surfing subway cars.

One audacious roof rider captured their illegal trip on an M15 articulated bus, the streetscape blurring past as the steel behemoth hurtled down Second Avenue in Manhattan’s Murray Hill neighborhood, video footage shared on Instagram this week showed.

A February clip showed a hoodie-clad youth running and jumping on the roof of a moving bus in Queens. X @EJonatha4766004
A February clip showed a hoodie-clad youth running and jumping on the roof of a moving bus in Queens. X @EJonatha4766004

Another vertigo-inducing clip posted on X in February showed a hoodie-clad youth crouching down on the roof of a different articulated bus — before hopping on to a different section of the vehicle and ducking beneath an electric cable line.

“If there’s something ridiculous, foolhardy and dangerous, teens will figure out how to do it,” straphanger Pamelda Candusso Hirsch, 71, griped to The Post.

“They could forever ruin so many lives.”

Mustapha Sawaneh, who has driven MTA buses along crosstown routes for six years, warned the brazen surfers who are taking their stunts from the city’s underground to the streets face more “unpredictable” and dangerous terrain.

“If a cab cuts in front of you, you have to slam on the breaks. If someone steps out on the street, you have to swerve the bus,” Sawaneh, 26, said.

One MTA bus operator warned surfing on New York City streets was more “unpredictable” compared to the subways. X @EJonatha4766004
One MTA bus operator warned surfing on New York City streets was more “unpredictable” compared to the subways. X @EJonatha4766004

“If you’re [subway] surfing you can see a train curve ahead, what’s coming up [but] when you’re bus surfing you don’t know what’s going to happen.”

Several bus drivers suspected the reckless riders were somehow scampering aboard their vehicles while they were parked during their 10-minute breaks, or even a 30-second stop at a red light.

“Operators are going to need to check [the top of buses] before we head out,” said veteran operator Jason Williams, 40.

He warned it’s impossible to tell from the driver’s seat whether their bus has a roof-level stowaway “unless someone tells you, and then it might be too late.”

New York City and state officials have attempted to crack down on the scourge of transit surfers, which they say has become more common among teens who are trying to copy what they see on TikTok and Instagram.

MTA bus operators think the rogue riders are getting on buses’ roofs when they stop at the end of their route or at traffic lights. Instagram @_thisisnyc_
MTA bus operators think the rogue riders are getting on buses’ roofs when they stop at the end of their route or at traffic lights. Instagram @_thisisnyc_

In September, the Adams administration and the MTA deployed a public service campaign with ads and announcements warning about the dangers of subway surfing.

At least two people have been killed riding outside of trains this year, including 14-year-old Alam Reyes, who was killed after he was thrown from the top of a southbound F train in Brooklyn.

Last year, at least five teens were killed while subway surfing.

Dave Steckel, an MTA spokesman, said the agency was investigating the incidents.