Skip to main content

It's all Greek for Littlepay in Athens

Visa and Planeta Informatica are also working with Athens Urban Transport Organisation
By David Arminas May 8, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
Athens metro: contactless EMV payment coming (© ITS International | Adam Hill)

Transit payments processing specialist Littlepay has begun a city-wide roll-out of contactless payments across all transport modes in Athens, Greece.

The contactless payment initiative, led by the public utility Athens Urban Transport Organisation (OASA) and its selected suppliers, is intended to simplify the daily commute and make public transportation more accessible.

The project is a collaboration between Littlepay, credit card company Visa, Cybersource (an American payment gateway) and Brazilian payment platform Planeta Informatica and key stakeholders, including National Bank of Greece, digital payment solutions provider HST, digital transformation company LG CNS and ASIS, the American Society for Industrial Security.

In the first phase of the deployment, riders on the bus from Athens International Airport will be able to pay for their €5.50 flat fare using a contactless bank card or a mobile wallet. This will be swiftly followed by a full roll-out across the city’s metro, tram, trolleybus and bus services.

Littlepay said the project came to life in an incredibly short timescale. Littlepay’s involvement began only in mid-February and the first roll-out went live only 10 weeks later, explained Sheryll Ricketts, solutions consultancy lead at Littlepay. 

“There were many stakeholders involved in this deployment that had to work together to make OASA’s vision come to life,” she said. “I am proud of our team and our partners who have pulled together to launch the solution in record time. Hopefully, this will pave the way for many more projects in Greece.”

“We are confident that citizens and tourists will benefit from the upgraded experience of travelling within Athens Metropolitan area, after the completion of the project at the end of 2024,” said Kang Sok Kim, software architect at LG CNS. The company is a South Korean professional DX (Digital Transformation) company within the LG Group, offering IT system integration services such as IT consulting and development.

Littlepay said the project is a good example of how a VSAM - virtual storage access method - deployment can breathe new life into older card readers and massively reduce both capital cost and the time to rollout. VSAM is a file management system that allows access data in various ways. Planeta’s VSAM is a small modular add-on that slots inside existing validators to “switch on” open-loop transit payments. This can be achieved without major changes to the existing validator hardware or software, reducing reliance on the existing terminal supplier. The solution is basically plug-and-play.

Littlepay and Planeta have a long-standing relationship, having collaborated previously on similar open-loop projects in Peru and Costa Rica. The physical deployment is a simple job of opening the validator and slotting the VSAM chip in. With OASA running nearly 8,000 validators across the city, the cost and time savings are difficult to overstate, said Littlepay.

Littlepay is a transit-focused payment specialist which provides payment processing at the heart of a contactless EMV ticketing solution. EMV stands for Europay, Mastercard and Visa, the three companies that created the standard. Its modular, API-based payments platform plugs-and-plays with pre-integrated ‘Littlepay-Ready’ validators, back offices, payment gateways and acquiring banks. This gives transit agencies a fast, flexible route to contactless payment acceptance.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Demonstration of first German A9 motorway safety project
    November 10, 2015
    In the first project of the ‘digital A9 motorway test bed’ to show how vehicles on a motorway can share hazard information, Continental, Deutsche Telekom, Fraunhofer ESK and Nokia Networks have carried out a real-time demonstration of communication between vehicles via the Deutsche Telecom LTE cell network. The project, which aims to improve road safety and traffic management, involved upgrading Deutsche Telekom's existing LTE network at sections of the A9 motorway test bed with Nokia Networks’ mobile e
  • Big data helps San Diego optimise public transit
    July 14, 2014
    San Diego Metropolitan Transit System (MTS) has turned to Cubic’s big data subsidiary Urban Insights to make better use of its data, according to a report in Information Week. The agency has disparate data sources, including a smart-card payment system, GPS-based automatic vehicle location devices on buses, automatic passenger counters on trolleys, and extensive route and schedule information formatted in the general transit feed specification (GTFS) format developed by Google in 2006. "We look at all
  • Iveda in $1.5m Taiwan Pole position
    January 17, 2023
    City of Kaohsiung will use Utilus smart poles to help with traffic management & EV charging
  • Wavetronix radar-based traffic sensor cuts costs
    May 30, 2013
    While initial cost of radar based detection may be higher than that traditional loops, lower maintenance costs more than balance the books. Following successful field tests, the US city of Greenville, North Carolina, has recently agreed a new policy of phasing in Wavetronix traffic sensor technology’s radar-based SmartSensor Matrix system across its signalised traffic intersections. City traffic engineer Rik DiCesare expects the incremental implementation to deliver benefits to both the city’s taxpayers an