Skip to main content

Init helps Nottingham buses go cashless

The system received a 96% satisfaction score from more than 600 testers, firm says
By Ben Spencer October 27, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Init system is expected to automatically calculate the best fare for the user (Credit: NCT)

Init's Proxmobil3 units are being installed across Nottingham City Transport (NCT) buses in the UK in a move which will enable cashless payments. 

Jens Mullak, managing director at Init, says the coronavirus pandemic has accelerated a shift from traditional ticketing to cashless payments. 

“With advice continuing to be that people should pay by card wherever possible, the introduction of contactless payments for Nottingham couldn’t have come at a more appropriate time,” Mullak continues. “The new system will mean safer, quicker boarding and an improved fare structure for users of the service, and also help the operator make savings by reducing the need to handle cash.”

Init says the payment system will also automatically calculate the best fare for the user - taking into account all the journeys made during a day, and charging a single payment of a daily capped rate.

Nicola Tidy, marketing and communications director at NCT, says: “By simply tapping their contactless card or device on the bus each time they board, the contactless system does the hard work by adding up their journeys and charging customers based on their journeys during the day.”

According to Init, the system is being deployed following a trial that received a 96% satisfaction score from more than 600 testers. 

The Nottingham Contactless system will be available once all operators are on board by early 2021.

Related Content

  • April 8, 2025
    TfGM launches tap and go pay across Bee Network
    Payment for buses and trams in UK's Greater Manchester region are simplified
  • December 14, 2012
    Contactless payments introduced on London's buses
    Bus passengers in London can now use their use their contactless debit, credit or charge card to touch in on the yellow Oyster card readers and pay the single Oyster fare on any of London's 8,500 buses. Introducing the scheme, Transport for London (TfL) says the new payment option will also be good news for the approximately 36,000 people per day who board a bus and find they have insufficient pay as you go balance on their Oyster to pay for their journey as they will be able to use the other card they may
  • November 23, 2012
    Nottingham takes to e-ticketing
    England’s least car dependent city, Nottingham, is to further develop its public transport system with integrated ticketing solutions from Germany-headquartered ITS provider INIT, which is to supply systems for the town’s bus and tram network. With more than 40 million customer journeys per year, Nottingham’s independent bus operator Trent Barton was already successfully using INIT’s integrated ticketing solution comprising of Electronic Ticketing Machines (ETM), validators and Mango smartcards. Passengers
  • March 16, 2021
    UK puts £3bn into new bus strategy
    Daily fare caps, plus better coordination of multimodal services, are promised