Skip to main content

MasterCard and Masabi integrate mobile ticketing

A global partnership between MasterCard and mobile ticketing provider Masabi is set to combine MasterCard’s payment technology with Masabi’s JustRide mobile ticketing platform, providing consumers with a faster and more convenient way to get around a city’s transit system. Masabi will integrate MasterPass, MasterCard’s secure digital payment service, into JustRide, enabling consumers to pay for their ticket with a simple touch. The first city to benefit from this alliance will be Athens, where passe
January 15, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
A global partnership between 1756 MasterCard and mobile ticketing provider 6870 Masabi is set to combine MasterCard’s payment technology with Masabi’s JustRide mobile ticketing platform, providing consumers with a faster and more convenient way to get around a city’s transit system.

Masabi will integrate MasterPass, MasterCard’s secure digital payment service, into JustRide, enabling consumers to pay for their ticket with a simple touch.

The first city to benefit from this alliance will be Athens, where passengers of the Greek capital’s transit systems are now able to use an innovative mobile solution to pay their fare. By using Masabi’s end-to-end JustRide system, a million daily customers can purchase and display tickets for immediate and future travel through their smart-phone, saving time and hassle. JustRide also includes validation software allowing tickets to be scanned using standard smart-phones or using gates or stand-alone validation units.

“Given that already today more than 50 per cent of us live in urban areas this trend brings significant challenges such as crowding and congestion to cities,” said Hany Fam, president MasterCard Enterprise Partnerships. “By combining our expertise, MasterCard and Masabi are removing the friction that slows down how people move around, while also improving quality of life in cities and helping authorities to better manage population growth and urban development.”

“Mobile ticketing is all about making life easier for transit riders, and making payment as simple as possible is central to this experience,” said Brian Zanghi, CEO of Masabi. “By transforming smart-phones into vending machines, tickets can be purchased any time, any place making waiting in line a thing of the past. Athens is our first deployment working with MasterCard, and we look forward to working together to enable mobile ticketing and payments in other cities around the globe.”

Related Content

  • Masabi mobile ticketing to roll out on New York MTA
    May 19, 2016
    Following successful field testing, the first phase of the Masabi MTA eTix apps developed for New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), is expected to launch on select lines of the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) and Metro-North (MNR) in June. The app, which allows customers to purchase train tickets via a mobile device, will first debut on the LIRR’s Port Washington Branch and Metro-North’s Hudson Line and will be available to all Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North customers by the end of
  • Moovel launch mobile ticketing solution for Caltrain rail service
    February 15, 2018
    Moovel North America has launched its Caltrain Mobile application with the intention of offering a more convenient and accessible ticketing solution for commuters using the rail service along the San Francisco Peninsula and Santa Clara Valley (SCV). It is said to enable users to purchase, store and access fares directly from their smartphones. Caltrain Mobile aims to provide users with 24/7 purchasing capabilities; multi-ticket options which are purchasable from one phone and; full compliance with Payment
  • Santa Monica’s Big Blue Bus chooses contactless fare collection
    October 31, 2012
    Arcontia International, Swedish producer of contactless smart card readers and terminals, is to supply fare collection equipment manufacturer LECIP with a smart card based fare collection solution for the City of Santa Monica’s Big Blue Bus (BBB) public transport operator. The system will be installed on Big Blue Buses operating throughout the City of Santa Monica and the greater Los Angeles area, providing transport to more than 20 million people annually. Arcontia contactless smartcard readers will be in
  • Ability to keep in touch on US buses woos travellers
    February 1, 2012
    David Crawford finds evidence of a new trend in American intercity travel: that better access to data sources on the move is tempting passengers away from air travel and onto surface modes. In the US the ease of use of Portable Electronic Devices (PEDs) is successfully wooing long-distance travellers away from airlines and onto surface public transport, according to just-published research. Using data from field observations of 7,028 passengers travelling by bus, air and train in 14 US states and the Distri