Skip to main content

Unicard smart ticketing set for Scotland

Solution will digitise Strathclyde Partnership for Transport’s ZoneCard ticketing
By David Arminas July 4, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
Glasgow Subway is included in the new arrangement (© Wirestock | Dreamstime.com)

Strathclyde Partnership for Transport will use Unicard’s smart ticketing platform to digitise paper-based ZoneCard ticketing on ScotRail, Glasgow Subway and bus routes in west Scotland.

The ZoneCard ticket can be purchased on a website or dedicated mobile app. Unicard’s ITSO-based platform is compatible with smartcard ticketing systems used by other local authorities and transport operators in Scotland.

Users with an existing transport card such as Transport Scotland’s National Entitlement Card – also provided by Unicard – can add ZoneCard tickets to it without needing to purchase or carry a new card. It has removed the need to buy paper tickets from the driver when boarding. Instead, a passenger can “tap in”. It is designed to improve the passenger experience and reduce the complexity involved with managing paper tickets.

It is based around ITSO, the established and widely-used national smart ticketing standard. ITSO, previously called the Integrated Transport Smartcard Organisation, maintains the ITSO standard for smart ticketing in the UK.

Unicard’s ticketing platform comprises its Mobility as a Service (MaaS)-ready ticketing platform, a central back-office solution encompassing a high performance ITSO HOPS (Host Operator Processing System) and flexible customer management system, which securely processes all smart transactions.

This combined solution is supported by a dedicated customer self-service web portal and mobile app for iOS and Android devices. The cloud-based solution can scale to support different modes of transport and mobility services when required. It can also be configured to support account-based ticketing in line with fare capping and flexible travel schemes.

“A key benefit and differentiator of our platform is that it is token-agnostic, and therefore supports other technologies,” said Sean Dickinson, chief executive of UK-based Unicard. “This means that while ITSO may be the best solution for now, the platform is future-proofed. With these new capabilities Strathclyde Partnership for Transport can accommodate other token types and services like QR codes, contactless bank cards or account-based ticketing whenever they choose.”

Unicard was founded 20 years ago and has two offices in the UK and a technical development team in Bulgaria. Unicard’s solutions use open and distributed architectures. It has direct relationships with organisations, but also partners with third party service suppliers. 

Its portfolio of fully-hosted and managed solutions support travel scheme expansion from single usage or concession to multimodal and multi-operator configurations across smartcard, barcode and EMV - a payment method based on a technical standard for smart payment cards and for payment terminals and automated teller machines which can accept them. EMV stands for Europay, Mastercard and Visa, the three companies that created the standard for the EMV smart cards

Unicard said that it processes over four billion secure transactions a year and supports around eight million passengers around the UK. Its back-office solutions power over 80 local authorities in the UK, including Transport for West Midlands, Transport Scotland, Transport for Wales, Transport for London and Rail Delivery Group.

Related Content

  • August 11, 2017
    Singapore aims for cashless public transport by 2020
    Singapore’s Land Transport Authority (LTA) and TransitLink are working towards a fully cashless vision for public transport by 2020, as part of their Smart Nation efforts. LTA and TransitLink are to launch a series of initiatives where commuters will no longer use cash to pay for rides or to top up stored-value cards. A key part of this is account-based ticketing, which LTA has been piloting with Mastercard since March 2017. This provides commuters with the convenience of tapping in and out with contactless
  • November 16, 2023
    GMV to provide account-based ticketing for Cyprus buses
    Company will build on existing smart card system on 750 vehicles
  • May 4, 2018
    Hop Fastpass offers fare payments in Portland-Vancouver area
    Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation District’s (TriMet’s) Hop Fastpass system by Init is now fully operational in the Portland-Vancouver Metropolitan area. TriMet, Portland Streetcar and public transit agency C-Tran passengers can use the virtual smart card within Google Pay to purchase their fares. The option to use Google Pay has been enabled through a collaboration between TriMet, Init and urban mobility company Moovel. Riders can now tap Android devices with the virtual card to 1,200 Init
  • June 6, 2018
    Hop Fastpass offers fare payments in Portland-Vancouver area
    Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation District’s (TriMet’s) Hop Fastpass system by Init is now fully operational in the Portland-Vancouver Metropolitan area. TriMet, Portland Streetcar and public transit agency C-Tran passengers can use the virtual smart card within Google Pay to purchase their fares. The option to use Google Pay has been enabled through a collaboration between TriMet, Init and urban mobility company moovel. Riders can now tap Android devices with the virtual card to 1,200 Init fare