Skip to main content

Manchester extends Metrolink tap and go to trams and buses

UK city will soon have integrated payment in same way as capital London
By David Arminas March 4, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
'Huge leap forward for the Bee Network' (© ITS International | Adam Hill)

The UK's Greater Manchester urban area will have, from 23 March, contactless ‘tap and go’ payment on trams and buses, an expansion of what exists on the city’s Metrolink.

Passengers still wanting to pay cash or buy tickets can do so, with tickets also available for purchase via the Bee Network app. Fares will be capped automatically to ensure passengers pay the best value fare up to the daily or weekly cap.

“The introduction of tap and go across bus and tram is huge leap forward for the Bee Network,” said Andy Burnham, mayor of Greater Manchester. “We’re working hard to deliver a transport network that is greener, cheaper and more reliable than ever before, and this will be the next big milestone since we brought buses back under local control - on time and on budget.”  

The region will also launch on the same day an annual bus and tram ticket that will unlock unlimited travel across both modes. 

Customers will be able to spread the payments weekly or monthly – at no extra cost – with the support of a bank loan. Tickets are also available to buy outright from Transport for Greater Manchester ticket offices or via the Bee Network app.  

Bus use in Greater Manchester rose by 5% compared to 2023 and is almost back to pre-pandemic levels. As well, last year Metrolink set a record for the number of journeys, with 45.6 million trips in 2024. This beat the previous record set in 2019. 

Metrolink is a tram/light rail system with 99 stops along 100km of standard-gauge route, making it the most extensive light rail system in the UK. Plans are already being developed to include all local train services by the end of the decade. 

The rail network regularly carried more than four million passengers each month last year, compared to 200,000 per month during Covid.

In the past five years, Greater Manchester has also seen the number of people walking short journeys increase from 52% to 57%. Meanwhile the proportion of short journeys being taken by car is down from 41% to 36%, with trips using Starling Bank bike hire, which reached one million rides last year, also up 16% year on year.

Vernon Everitt, transport commissioner for Greater Manchester, said the positive rises in travel numbers shows that the city is making “positive steps towards realising its ambitions for half of all journeys to be made using public transport or active travel by 2040”.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Taiwan to go all-electronic free flow tolling
    November 28, 2013
    Taiwan’s 900 kilometres of toll roads will transition to all-electronic free flow operations early next year. The roads, which include three north-south routes with 22 toll points, carry out around 1.7 million transactions a day, generating some US$700 million of annual toll revenue. Private contractor Far Eastern Electronic Toll Collection Company (FETC), under contract to the National Freeway Bureau to collect the tolls, says that the IR-based toll system worked well and some 43 per cent of transactio
  • Hurdles to MaaS adoption highlighted
    January 25, 2018
    Jack Opiola talks to some MaaS advocates in the US. Cities will accommodate almost 60% of the world’s population by 2025 and technology is outpacing transportation plans and planners - putting extreme pressures upon planners and transportation systems alike. Big data, digital payments, ubiquitous communications, smartphone applications, on-demand travel and autonomous vehicles are all shredding existing transport plans. Never before has the pace of population growth and the tools to address this problem
  • EBRD helps improve public transport system in Arad, Romania
    June 11, 2012
    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) is continuing to support improvements to public transport systems in Romania with a loan of up to US$25.75 million to the city of Arad to finance the acquisition of new energy efficient trams. The financing will support the city’s wider objective of restructuring its public transport system and improving efficiency, as well as reducing traffic congestion and air pollution in Arad.
  • Dallas Area Rapid Transit opts for Vix Technology open payments system
    October 7, 2015
    Smart ticketing and payment technology provider Vix Technology is to implement a new state-of-the-art comprehensive fare payment system for DART, Dallas Area Rapid Transit, utilising its eO (easy and open) product. The eO system, an account based, open payments and PCI compliant fare collection platform will provide DART customers with the flexibility to pay via NFC-enabled smartphones, third party or agency-issued transit cards or to use EMV contactless cards.