Passenger transport law is not just road rules. It deals with the business of carrying people. That means the law looks at the operator, the booking service, the driver, the vehicle, the passenger, the fare, the safety system and the records that prove what happened.
For an operator, the practical question is whether the service needs authorisation, accreditation, a licence, a booking-service approval or some other registration before the first trip. A small business can run into the regime when it offers rideshare services, operates taxis or hire cars, runs a shuttle, transports hotel guests, provides tourist transfers, operates a small bus, manages a dispatch platform, or subcontracts passenger transport through another provider.
For New South Wales, the local focus is point to point taxi and hire vehicle services, booking service providers, safety duties, authorisations, vehicle and driver records, fares, compliance audits and commissioner enforcement. Covered services commonly include taxi services, hire vehicle services, booking service providers, authorised service providers, drivers, vehicles and safety management systems.
The exact categories, exemptions, vehicle standards, driver checks, fare rules and reporting pathways should be checked against the current Act, regulations, service standards and regulator guidance.
The business should treat passenger transport compliance as a live customer-safety system. Before scaling, it should know who is responsible for driver onboarding, vehicle inspection, insurance, complaints, fare disclosures, booking records, fatigue or incident escalation, accessibility requests and data handover if a regulator asks questions. Contracts with drivers, subcontractors and booking platforms should allocate those responsibilities clearly.