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Contactless travel is now available to millions of Stagecoach customers

Posted: 14 August 2017 | Intelligent Transport | No comments yet

Millions of Stagecoach passengers have access to contactless bus travel as the operator continues to roll-out the technology across the UK.

Millions of Stagecoach passengers now have access to contactless bus travel as Britain’s biggest bus operator continues to roll-out the technology across the UK.

Seven Stagecoach companies (with a combined fleet of more than 3,000 buses and 360 million customer journeys a year) now offer customers the convenient payment technology.

The £12 million programme, which was launched last October, allows millions of passengers to pay for their travel with a contactless credit or debit card, as well as Apple Pay and Android Pay and it is the first major deployment of contactless technology on Britain’s buses outside London, benefiting customers across England, Scotland and Wales.

Furthermore, Stagecoach has added Scottish Citylink to an expanded national roll-out programme which will see the technology installed on all of the company’s 8,500 buses across the UK by early 2019.

“We now have the largest contactless payments scheme outside London”

“We now have the largest contactless payments scheme outside London, with thousands of payments being made using contactless technology on our buses every week,” said Stagecoach UK Bus Managing Director for England and Wales, Mark Threapleton. “Along with traditional cash payments, our StagecoachSmart card and mobile ticketing through our Stagecoach Bus smartphone app, we are giving customers choice about how they want to buy their travel and making it even easier and more convenient to travel by bus. We look forward to introducing this technology to the rest of our passengers in the UK in the coming months.”

Contacless technology for millions of passengers

Stagecoach is also working with other major bus operators on a large-scale project to have EMV contactless technology installed on every one of the UK’s 32,000-plus buses outside London.

The project would cover more than 1,200 bus operators in England, Scotland and Wales, and make contactless travel available for 5.2 billion bus passenger journeys a year across Britain. Associated government legislation would be needed to ensure contactless ticketing was offered by all individual bus operators.

Last year, major operators completed the introduction of smart multi-operator bus ticketing in all nine of England’s smart city regions with support from local transport authorities. Passengers can travel seamlessly between operators in Greater Manchester, Merseyside, Tyne and Wear, West Midlands, South and West Yorkshire, as well as Nottingham, Leicester and Bristol, making public transport more accessible in regions which account for around 15 million people – over a quarter of England’s population.

A similar project is now underway to deliver the same benefits to Scotland’s major cities. Multi-operator schemes are already live in Aberdeen and Dundee, with Glasgow and Edinburgh to follow.

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