Skip to main content

CDoT enables contactless bus payments

Agency links with Masabi to enable safer journeys in rural parts of Colorado
By Ben Spencer February 3, 2021 Read time: 1 min
Bustang Outrider is a regional bus network that connects rural Colorado (image credit: CDoT)

The Colorado Department of Transportation (CDoT) and Masabi are launching an app to enable contactless payments on a regional bus network connecting rural areas of the state. 

The app for Bustang Outrider uses a Fare Payments as a Service (FPaaS) approach, helping transit agencies access the latest fare payment innovations quickly, via a cloud native platform like Masabi’s Justride. 

Riders can access Outrider's new text service to receive real-time alerts about delays, detours, cancellations and schedule changes. When subscribing, users can receive alerts for the routes that interest them. 

Outrider is also available on Google Transit for passengers to plan their routes and timing.

Passengers can plot their trip by inputting start and end locations and preferred arrival and departure times, but can still pay with money when boarding the bus. 

The service covers five routes: Durango-Grand Junction, Gunnison-Denver, Alamosa-Pueblo, Lamar-Colorado Springs and Craig-Denver.

Related Content

  • Bus service data, better journey planning, better information
    January 30, 2012
    Chris Gibbard and Paul Drummond of Transport Direct on developments in Great Britain in the electronic transfer of bus service data. Great Britain has a dynamic bus market which permits a bus operator to initiate or alter commercial routes by giving a minimum of eight weeks' notice to a registrar (the Traffic Commissioner). A Local Transport Authority (LTA) neither specifies nor determines such services. In addition to commercial bus routes, an LTA will tender and contract for the operation of those additio
  • Traffic Group: ‘Daily commute may never be the same’
    May 22, 2020
    The pandemic has taught us that our ideas about travel might need a rethink - Wes Guckert suggests a few ways in which change is coming
  • Bus location system delivers real-time passenger information
    November 28, 2012
    VeriFone Systems has installed its open-architecture vehicle tracking TransitPAY system on more than 1,000 buses serving the Bronx, following the award of a US$8.5 million contract by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) of New York. The Bronx contract award follows a similar contract in 2011 for the Staten Island fleet component of the MTA Bus Time system, which uses VeriFone on-board systems to generate location data that is communicated wirelessly to the Bus Time server that passengers can acc
  • Rapid growth of bus rapid transit schemes on US Pacific coast
    January 27, 2012
    This section pulls together all the multi-modal topics in each issue. Subject matter will include smartcards; ticketing and payment systems; passenger information systems; fleet management for buses, trains and light rail; park and ride systems; on-line access to real-time information via Internet portals