Skip to main content

Caltrans starts Cal-ITP initiative

Monterey-Salinas Transit fares go contactless in state-wide bid to make travel cost-effective
By Ben Spencer May 13, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Visa says fares will be capped at $10 per day (image courtesy of Monterey-Salinas Transit)

Visa has partnered with transit agency Monterey-Salinas Transit (MST) and Caltrans to provide bus riders in California with a contactless payment option. 

It is the first contactless payment demonstration of the California Integrated Travel Project (Cal-ITP), a Caltrans-led initiative to make travel more cost-effective for 40 million residents. 

Riders can now tap their contactless credit, debit, pre-paid card or payment-enabled device on readers in MST buses for a secure way to travel, without needing to purchase or load a separate transit card or handle cash while boarding.

Visa research shows that enabling tap to pay on transit systems like these can be good for economic recovery, bringing more than a 15% lift in transactions from merchants in surrounding neighbourhoods.

Brian Cole, head of North America product at Visa, says: “Visa recognises the importance of expanding eligibility and access to fare payment options that meet the needs of a diverse set of transit riders. This effort with MST and Caltrans illustrates how open, contactless payments can support innovative and equitable fare policies to benefit riders and transit operators across the state.”

Visa says “fare capping” will ensure riders will not pay more than $10 per day—as long as they pay with the same card or mobile wallet throughout the day. 

Other partners involved in the project include Visa solution Cybersource, payment platform Littlepay and ticketing specialist SC Soft. 

Fernando Souza, vice president at Cybersource, says: “There is a great sense of urgency among transit operators to adopt these solutions and we are committed to powering secure, seamless contactless solutions in a world where no contact, touchless experiences are here to stay.”
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • OCTA partners with Init for mobile ticketing project
    January 11, 2017
    Init Innovations in Transportation has partnered with the Orange County Transportation Authority (OCTA) in California for the implementation of electronic fare readers and a back-office revenue management system for the agency’s 556 fixed-route vehicle fleet. OCTA operates countywide bus and paratransit services, as well as the planning, financing and coordinating of Orange County's freeway, street and rail development and operation of the 91 Express Lanes. Init will install its PROXmobil3 fare reader
  • CARTES considers questions of security
    November 4, 2014
    Ensuring the security of payment systems is essential to maintain consumer confidence. The conference track ‘EMV: Challenges and benefits’, looks at ways of improving that security. When a customer uses his payment card in a store, he expects that the system will be secure. The interaction between EMV payment cards and POS terminals is strictly controlled.
  • Vivacity & Vaisala take the air 
    November 18, 2021
    Partners will deploy 350 air quality sensors in UK's West Midlands Combined Authority area 
  • Virtual ITS European Congress 2020: report
    November 25, 2020
    ITS industry ‘needs to make a move towards each other’, Congress delegates hear