Skip to main content

Uber app now includes US public transit agencies

The ride-hailing app's users are able to buy journey tickets in Ohio and Kentucky
By Adam Hill July 17, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Uber: 'People who wouldn’t regularly consider transit will realise how easy and affordable it can be'

Uber customers can now use the ride-hailing firm's app to buy public transport tickets, plan journeys and ride with 13 transit agencies in Ohio and Kentucky.

Uber Transit Ticketing uses EZfare and is a collaboration with payment specialist Masabi and NeoRide, a collective of 15 transit systems whose raison d'etre is the development and promotion of US regional public transportation services.
 
After a rider enters a destination in the Uber app they see a 'Transit' option, which will give journey planning information, including real-time transit data and directions.

“With a public transit option now appearing in the Uber app, I hope people who wouldn’t regularly consider transit will realise how easy and affordable it can be,” said Ben Capelle, president of NeoRide and CEO of Laketran.     
 
“The partnership with Uber makes transit a more visible and accessible option by highlighting regional transit systems that Uber users may not know exist."

Tickets use visual and barcode validation, so riders can go contactless on public transport - and they will cost the same as existing options.
 
The system uses Masabi’s Justride software development kit. Company CEO Brian Zanghi said it "shows how this model can be deployed successfully on a regional multi-agency basis". 
 
The full list of agencies whose fares are - or will soon be - available on the Uber app are:

•    Cincinnati Bell Connector (Cincinnati Streetcar)
•    Laketran (Lake County)
•    Lancaster-Fairfield Transit
•    MCPT (Medina County)
•    METRO RTA (Summit County) 
•    PARTA (Portage County)
•    Sandusky Transit (Erie County)
•    SARTA (Stark County)
•    TARTA (Lucas County)
•    WRTA (Mahoning County)
•    BCRTA (Butler County) 
•    SORTA (Hamilton County)
•    TANK (Northern Kentucky)
 
Separately, in Canada, Justride is also being employed in Masabi's My Fare, a contactless mobile ticketing app for Calgary Transit that lets passengers buy tickets and passes using their smartphones.

As part of the project, over 1,000 new validation devices have been installed across the bus network covering 155 routes. 

Passengers scan their dynamic and encrypted mobile passes on the devices when boarding the bus, with an audible beep and a coloured screen identifying the ticket as valid for use.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Wini unveils dispatch software for Columbus taxis
    September 11, 2019
    Wini Technologies has launched Winicabs, an automated dispatch software which it says unites taxis under one app in the city of Columbus, Ohio. Beyene Gola, president of the Independent Taxicab Association of Columbus, says: "Taxi companies have historically been spread across the city with no easy way to connect.” Wini Technologies, an Irish technology start-up, says riders can hail the closest driver, track their rides, book trips in advance and pay fares through the app, money or credit card. Riders
  • Campaign calls for full funding for metropolitan transport
    February 9, 2015
    A US pressure group is pushing for full funding for metropolitan transport, with a campaign that could have implications for other public transport systems. The Move NY team campaign aims to bring a faster, safer, fairer transportation system to the greater New York metropolitan region. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) is responsible for public transportation in the US state of New York, serving 12 counties in south-eastern New York, along with two counties in south-western Connecticut und
  • Cubic promotes the power of partnerships
    August 22, 2016
    Cubic’s Andy Taylor considers the growing need for partnerships in the transportation sector. At the end of June, The Guardian newspaper in the UK broke a game-changing transport story – Sidewalk Labs, a secretive subsidiary of Alphabet, Google’s parent company, is working on a project that aims to radically overhaul parking and transportation in American cities.
  • Renée Amilcar: "I trust in transit, I rely on transit, and I love transit"
    June 12, 2025
    Renée Amilcar, UITP president and boss of Ottawa’s OC Transpo, talks to Adam Hill about relying on public transport, the importance of user experience – and what to expect from the upcoming UITP Summit 2025 in Hamburg…