Skip to main content

GMV to provide account-based ticketing for Cyprus buses

Company will build on existing smart card system on 750 vehicles
By Adam Hill November 16, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
ABT system will be available on public transit in Cyprus

GMV has been awarded a contract to introduce an account-based ticketing (ABT) system on public transit in Cyprus.

It will provide this for 750 city and intercity buses, operated by six companies, under concession by the Ministry of Transport, Communications and Works.

The bus fleet already has a smart card system, but now passengers will be able to have ticket-free travel, using contactless cards, phones, smartwatches and bank cards to pay.

GMV is implementing a pilot bank card payment system on buses in the eastern city of Famagusta, using technology which validates the integration of payment terminals compatible with bank systems - the first such deployment in Cyprus - with a view to a wider roll-out.

GMV will supply TV100 contactless card validators, which take both regular transit and bank cards. A payment gateway has been subcontracted to Switchio by e-payment solutions provider Monet+.

The project also involves renovating the display boards at the main bus station in Nicosia and migrating the entire IT infrastructure to the cloud.

GMV will also modernise the island's 750 school buses, run by five operators, equipping them with both a smart card system and a computer-aided dispatch and automatic vehicle location (CAD/AVL) system.

The technology will confirm the regularity of bus stops, while informing passengers of the occupancy and estimated arrival time of the next bus - and letting drivers know about the delay and occupancy of their own vehicle and the one following it.

The system will allow operators to manage the entire transportation service, and will also include tools for dispatching resources and alarm management.

The on-board equipment will include an Android mobile application for locating buses and making on-board card payments. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New thinking needed on the transportation front
    December 10, 2014
    Having spent his working life in transportation, Larry Yermack gives his views on today’s technology challenges. I remember it vividly; it was the late 80s, soon after I started as CFO of the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority and I was standing mid-span on the deck of the Verrazano Narrows Bridge on a Friday afternoon.
  • First e-ticketing contract in France for Hoeft & Wessel
    September 11, 2012
    German headquartered Hoeft & Wessel has received an order for the Almex e-ticketing system from French bus company Les Cars Air France, operated by Aérolis, a joint subsidiary of Keolis and Air France, to be installed on buses operating between Paris Charles-de-Gaulle and Paris Orly and the city of Paris. The order, the first in France for Hoeft & Wessel, comprises a total of 55 on-board ticket vending terminals with ticket printers, together with application software and integration into the back-office sy
  • French city pilots ticketless public transport payment by smartphone
    October 5, 2015
    French local transport authority Valence Romans Déplacements (VRD) in south-eastern France, is piloting Xerox Seamless, an easy-to-use technology for public transport mobile payments that enables passengers to make payments by smartphone. Between now and the end of June 150 customers will use the Xerox Seamless app on their smartphones to travel on the city’s buses, operated by Citéa for VRD. Xerox has installed near field communication (NFC) tags on VRD’s local and intercity bus lines. Users downloa
  • $129.5 million Philadelphia fare system contract awarded to ACS
    March 26, 2012
    The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) board has voted to award a contract of up to US$129.5 million to ACS Transport Solutions Group for equipment and services for the installation of a modernised fare system under its new payment technologies (NPT) programme.