Bus and subway riders got another chance to let their voices be heard Thursday regarding the MTA's proposed fare hikes.

The transit agency held its third New York City public hearing of the week at Baruch College's Performing Arts Center in Gramercy. 

Meetings were held earlier this week in Queens and on Staten Island.

The MTA is considering two plans.

Under Plan A, the fare would stay at $2.75 a ride, but the bonus for riders who buy more than one ride at a time would be cut in half.

Plan B would raise the price to $3 a ride but increases the bonus for those who put at least $6 on their card.

"I don't think any of them look good, because I don't think that there should be a fare increase," one woman at the hearing said.

"It's really a bother to low-budget-income families," said another attendee.

MTA officials say this will be the lowest fare hike since 2009. But many worry how it will affect the poor.

"I fear for those families that really have to live on that single-pay fare," one man at the public hearing said. "I would prefer to increase the cost of the 30-day."

It will also be the sixth fare increase since 2008, and some are clearly exhausted.

"The fares keep going up, up, up, and we're not getting anything better," one woman said. "In fact, the service has gotten somewhat worse."

The next public meeting on the proposals will be in The Bronx on Tuesday.

The MTA is slated to decide between the two plans at their January meeting, with that fare hike going into effect March 19.