And finally…change for the bus

The days of Scottish commuters scrambling around for change for the bus could be over after Perth-based transport giant Stagecoach announced that it is to adopt a contactless payment system on all of its regional bus services.

Britain’s biggest bus operator said the £12 million initiative, to be introduced across the UK by 2018, will allow passengers to pay for their travel with a contactless credit or debit card, as well as Apple Pay and Android Pay.

It is the first major deployment of contactless technology on Britain’s buses outside London and will benefit customers from major urban areas to rural and island communities.



Stagecoach launched the first stage of the major project with contactless now live on all of Stagecoach’s 180 buses in Oxfordshire.

It covers Oxford City services, commuter routes into Oxford and Oxford Tube express services which run to and from London 24 hours a day.

The facility will be rolled out to Ashford in Kent and Tyne and Wear by the end of this year with Greater Manchester following in January 2017, covering a further 1,300 buses and benefitting hundreds of thousands of bus passengers. By the end of 2018, the state-of-the-art technology will be live on all of Stagecoach’s 7,200 buses in England, Scotland and Wales - equivalent to nearly one in four buses outside London.

Stagecoach has already ordered 4,000 special ticket machines, covering more than 50 per cent of its bus fleet, with the remaining 3,200 machines scheduled for 2017-18. There will be no additional charge to customers for using contactless as a means of payment.

The move comes just weeks after Stagecoach launched a new smartphone app providing customers with simple journey planning, next-stop information and live bus tracking. Mobile phone ticketing is being rolled out across the UK over the next three months, with the facility already live in Greater Manchester.

Robert Montgomery, managing director of Stagecoach UK Bus, said: “Bus travel is experiencing a complete transformation. Major investment by Stagecoach in new digital technology is making it easier than ever to catch the bus. From contactless technology and new apps to greener vehicles with the latest environmental performance, buses are the simpler, smarter and greener mobility solution. But to maximise the benefit of this investment, we also need bold and urgent action by transport authorities to tackle the scourge of road congestion that is holding back bus reliability.”

Around 76 million contactless cards are now in issue in the UK – a rise of nearly 40 per cent in the past year. Some £929.8m was spent in the UK in October 2015 alone using a contactless card. Contactless transactions are already accepted on London’s 9,600 buses. Commuters in the capital were responsible for about 1 in 10 of all UK contactless payments in December 2014.

Share icon
Share this article: