Skip to main content

CheckMyBus and ClickBus partner in Brazil

International bus search engine CheckMyBus has teamed up with online bus ticket platform ClickBus, just in time for Olympic Games in Rio and enabling national and international travellers to locate bus connections in Brazil. The CheckMyBus bus search engine shows real-time schedules and prices in more than 50 countries, including Brazil. With more than 300 bus operators and millions of weekly departures CheckMyBus gives the user access to the world’s largest virtual bus network. Online bus ticketing
April 12, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
International bus search engine CheckMyBus has teamed up with online bus ticket platform ClickBus, just in time for Olympic Games in Rio and enabling national and international travellers to locate bus connections in Brazil.

The CheckMyBus bus search engine shows real-time schedules and prices in more than 50 countries, including Brazil. With more than 300 bus operators and millions of weekly departures CheckMyBus gives the user access to the world’s largest virtual bus network.

Online bus ticketing platform ClickBus is currently available in Brazil, Mexico, Colombia and Turkey.

The new partnership will enable ClickBus to deliver its Brazilian portfolio via the international CheckMyBus websites, including those in the United Kingdom, Germany, Spain, France, Italy, Poland, Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands and the United States. Brazilian bus operators connected to ClickBus and distributed by CheckMyBus benefit from an extended reach and can be booked from throughout the world. At the same time Brazilian users can search for bus connections in more than 50 countries in their own language.

Related Content

  • Here are the ITS America Awards finalists
    December 7, 2021
    The Best of ITS and Best of Mobility on Demand (MOD) finalists have been selected by a distinguished panel and now the winners will be judged LIVE - by you, the attendees!
  • Strike action prompts commuters to try something different
    June 2, 2014
    David Crawford highlights responses to transit disruption on both sides of the Atlantic. Shortly before workers at San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) began a lengthy round of pay and conditions-related strikes in summer 2013, impacting on the daily lives of 400,000 communities, online ridesharing group Avego publicised a new web address: bartstrike.com. By the start of the following week, Avego was encouraging stranded commuters to download its smartphone app by offering them the chance in a raffle
  • Is fare-free transit taking us for a ride?
    August 11, 2022
    More cities around the world are trialling fare-free public transit schemes. Do they work and are they sustainable? Andrew Stone puts absolutely no money on his travelcard and jumps on board
  • ITS boosts safety on Brazil’s Regis Bittencourt Highway
    October 5, 2016
    Brazil’s incident-prone Regis Bittencourt Highway was once known as ‘the highway of death’ but investment in ITS systems has brought about some big improvements, as Mauro Nogarin discovers Between 2010 and the end of 2014, Brazil made major investments in traffic technology across its national highways with the result that the ITS network went from 4,963km of fibre optics to 8,524km and the number of cameras increased from 1,127 to 3,208.