Skip to main content

Worldline and Unwire create MaaS solution

Payment technology + multimodal planning = 'next logical step', companies say
By Adam Hill September 28, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Getting together: Worldline and Unwire (© Unwire)

Payment group Worldline has linked up with Mobility as a Service (MaaS) company Unwire to pool resources in digital payment technology and transportation. 

The new solution uses open data for public transport and micromobility services, and can combine all mobility services within a city or region. 

The companies say this allows users to plan, book and pay for journeys through a dedicated smartphone app, with  one mobility account featuring subscriptions, capping and personalised tariffs.

Worldline already provides payment and mobility services in various French cities such as Paris, Lyon, Dijon and Grenoble but expects the new partnership to broaden its MaaS capabilities in the rest of Europe.

Based in Copenhagen, Unwire develops and operates mobile platforms for multimodal planning on public transport.

The companies say their new solution will benefit transport authorities by highlighting where services are most used, allowing them to support scheduling and route planning for the future.

Unwire won in the Recurring Payments category at Worldline’s e-Payments Challenge in 2019 - an annual forum for players in the payment technology industry - with its mobility platform integrated to Worldline’s Saferpay and Unwire BLE Connect.

"Combining our resources was the logical next step, allowing Unwire to benefit from our payment expertise whilst we benefit from Unwire’s MaaS expertise," says James Bain, Worldline CEO UK&I.

Since then, Unwire has worked with Worldline to develop the Tap2Use product that aims to improve and simplify travelling around cities.

Worldline’s e-Payments Challenge 2020 took place in a fully virtual format this month.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sustainable mobility? Only possible with a multifaceted approach
    May 25, 2023
    ITS European Congress 2023 was scene for 'full and frank exchange of views'
  • Sampo Hietanen’s mobility mission
    June 17, 2016
    For a decade Sampo Hietanen harboured a vision of an alternative form of mobility, now as CEO of MaaS Finland he is putting theory into practice. Sampo Hietanen has become the embodiment of Mobility as a Service (MaaS) – a concept he created 10 years ago while working for Finnish civil engineering giant Destia. “I had been working with the mobile sector on traffic information and started thinking what will happen when this becomes bigger,” he says.
  • ITS innovations – a change for the better?
    May 5, 2016
    Josef Czako takes a look at what the future developments may hold for both the transport sector and society. As the dust of the 2015 World Congress in Bordeaux settles, we can begin to see more clearly some of the most important future innovations in ITS are starting to be linked together: mobility as a service (MaaS), mobility pricing and autonomous vehicles. They all are based on global trends, like digitalisation, automation and servitisation.
  • Littlepay's in transit in Costa Rica
    June 30, 2022
    Central American country is adopting new contactless system for public transport payments