Skip to main content

Fairtiq offers PAYG ticketing in Czech Republic

Mobile pay-as-you-go solution will be launched later this year in the Zlín Region
By David Arminas February 28, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
When travellers arrive at their destination, they swipe again to end the cost calculation (image: Fairtiq)

Fairtiq is to provide a digital ticketing solution for multimodal public transport in the Czech Republic's Zlín Region.

Koved, the region’s public transport authority, chose the Swiss technology company as the preferred partner to develop an advanced mobile PAYG (pay-as-you-go) solution that will be launched later this year.

The award is the first for Fairtiq in the Czech Republic and its app will enable riders to use buses, trolleybuses and trains throughout the region seamlessly.

Based in Bern, Switzerland, the company said it was selected on the basis of its ability to roll out a hardware-free Software as a Service (SaaS) solution.

Before boarding public transport, passengers check in by swiping the app on their smartphone. This means they have a valid ticket for the entire public transport network in the corresponding region. When they arrive at their destination, they swipe again to end the cost calculation. The app uses location services to register the route travelled and calculates the correct fare.

Jakub Zach, chairman of the transport committee for the Zlín Region, said Koved has long wanted an app that would calculate the cost of a journey and then allows for the app user to pay for the journey.

"The Czech Republic is known internationally for excellent public transport and Zlín has long been a laboratory for new ideas," said Gian-Mattia Schucan, founder and co-chief executive of Fairtiq.

The Zlín Region Integrated Transportation agency (Integrovaná Doprava Zlínského Kraje - IDZK) provides 15 million annual trips on trains, regional and urban buses of nine different operators with integrated fares, schedules, transfers, branding and wayfinding. The region’s transport network, which covers the entirety of Zlín area with a population of 600,00), is run by Koved (Koordinátor veřejné dopravy Zlínského kraje / Zlín Region Public Transportation Authority).

Fairtiq’s free ticketing app and technology is already used across the entire public transport system in Switzerland and Liechtenstein, as well as in parts of Germany, Austria and France - and it was recently selected to provide nationwide ticketing in Denmark.

Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) uses the technology operated by Fairtiq in its own app, EasyRide, and Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) also uses Fairtiq technology in its app.

Related Content

  • San Francisco to launch mobile fare payment pilot
    January 19, 2015
    The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA), which oversees all transportation in the city, including the Municipal Railway (Muni), today announced that it will pilot a new smartphone application (app) for purchasing and using transit fares across the Muni system. With the new app, riders will no longer be required to have exact change or rely on fare vending machines to ride. The pilot is expected to begin in the summer of 2015. The SFMTA will be partnering with GlobeSherpa, a leading prov
  • Confidex to supply smart ticketing for Glasgow subway
    January 28, 2013
    Finland-headquartered contactless fare media supplier Confidex is to supply Strathclyde Partnership for Transport (SPT) with contactless ITSO (the UK technical standard for interoperable smart ticketing) smart tickets to replace the magnetic stripe tickets currently in use across the Glasgow underground system. The tickets will be encoded and issued from vending machines, parking machines and ticket offices. SPT assistant chief executive Eric Stewart says: “A key part of SPT’s subway modernisation work is
  • Success of London’s congestion charge scheme
    February 15, 2013
    Said to be the biggest congestion charge scheme to launch in any city, the London scheme got off to a smooth start ten years ago on 17 February 2003, much to the surprise of London's then mayor Ken Livingstone, who ten years later says “it turned out better than I expected.” None of the anticipated pre-7am congestion as drivers attempted to avoid the charge happened, and by the end of the first day 57,000 drivers had paid it. The main problem seemed to be that buses were all running ahead of time and had t
  • Masabi and Uber enter ride-sharing and transit ticketing partnership
    April 12, 2018
    UK-based Masabi will add public transit mobile ticketing into Uber’s app as part of a strategic partnership. Once an agreement is reached with a transit agency, Uber users will be able to book and display public transit tickets within the application to enable seamless multimodal journeys. Masabi’s Justride SDK will power Uber's ticketing option. The system intends to allow third party applications to request fare types, make payments and deliver visual barcode mobile tickets to a passenger through a