Skip to main content

Greek chorus welcomes contactless payment on Athens metro

Buses, trolleybuses, metro and trams join airport express in Tap2ride programme
By Adam Hill January 22, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Riders can now tap and go across Athens (image: Oasa)

Riders on public transport in Athens, Greece, can now make contactless payments for their journey.

The new 'Tap2ride' service on Athens Urban Transport Organisation (Oasa) covers buses, trolleybuses, metro and trams - it has been available since April 2024 on Athens' airport express bus lines.

Oasa has worked with Hellas Smart Ticket, LG CNS, Visa and NBG Pay to develop contactless on the Greek capital's urban transport network.

Customers will still be able to use an Ath.Ena ticket or Ath.Ena card but will now be able to swipe their bank card (debit, credit or pre-paid) or smart device over on-board validators as well.

Daily maximum charge is equal to the cost of a daily ticket - €4.10 - regardless of the number of journeys taken.

Travel to and from the airport costs €5.50 by bus and €9 via the metro.

Christos Staikouras, minister of infrastructure and transport, says: "The payment of fares via bank card in urban transport is one of the 10 priorities we set in the government's programme statements."

The government believes that contactless payment facilitates travel, as passengers do not have to look for ticket machines or kiosks, or wait in queues - and, perhaps most importantly, they don't need to know what ticket to get: they simply tap their card.

Upgrading urban transport improves the passenger experience and contributes to the development of smart cities, Oasa suggests, promoting smart mobility and helping citizens and visitors to move around Athens, thus increasing the revenue of transport operators.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Transport technology transforming bus stops in Los Angeles
    January 20, 2012
    David Crawford reports on a pioneering blend of transport technology and aesthetic By gaining a design award before installation has even started, the US$6.9 million City of Santa Monica (California)'s Big Blue Bus Shelter and Branding Package has ensured early interest among what it expects to be a new wave of transit riders. The American Institute of Architects' Los Angeles chapter's recently conferred 'Next LA Citation Award for Architecture', given for design excellence in projects as yet unbuilt, comm
  • Cubic’s Ventra system achieves one billion transactions in Chicago
    May 19, 2016
    Cubic Transportation Systems’ (CTS) Ventra, the account-based open payment system launched in 2013 for the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) and suburban bus operator Pace, has processed more than one billion account-based journeys. CTA, with daily ridership of 1.6 million journeys, is the first major transit system in North America to implement account-based open payment and is Cubic’s first large-scale deployment of its NextAccount technology. Ventra supports both account-based processing through an a
  • Smart travel gains momentum across the UK
    March 27, 2015
    UK Transport Minister Baroness Kramer has announced three initiatives to accelerate the introduction of smart ticketing across the country. At a meeting with the Smart Cities Partnership, the minister announced that over US$900,000 will be invested over the next two years to extend smart ticketing across the rail network in the West Midlands. She also presided over the signing of a concordat that sets out the basis for cooperation between bus operators and members of the partnership to start delivering
  • Drover AI’s Alex Nesic: ‘We’re still in the basement level of micromobility’
    April 12, 2022
    The micromobility revolution has reshaped the way we get around cities, but it has created some problems too. Drover AI’s PathPilot is here to help cities – and pedestrians – Alex Nesic tells Adam Hill