Skip to main content

Philippines bank combines banking and transport into one prepaid card

Dutch digital security specialist Gemalto is supplying the Bank of the Philippines Islands (BPI) with EMV prepaid banking and transport cards that support Manila Metro’s beep contactless ticketing system. BPI is one of the leading banks in the Philippines and the first to cater to both EMV and transport payment. The two-in-one card leverages Gemalto's Optelio technology and gives commuters greater security and convenience while increasing the transaction volume and user base for financial institutions.
August 31, 2016 Read time: 1 min
Dutch digital security specialist Gemalto is supplying the Bank of the Philippines Islands (BPI) with EMV prepaid banking and transport cards that support Manila Metro’s beep contactless ticketing system.

BPI is one of the leading banks in the Philippines and the first to cater to both EMV and transport payment. The two-in-one card leverages Gemalto's Optelio technology and gives commuters greater security and convenience while increasing the transaction volume and user base for financial institutions.  
 
The beep ticket was introduced in July 2015 to facilitate transit payment and quicker entrance at train stations' gantries. With only 31 per cent of all Filipino adults holding a bank account, integrating beep with banking lets financial institutions tap into a readily available and vast unbanked market.

Related Content

  • One million ASK contactless cards delivered in Dubai
    February 3, 2012
    ASK has announced the delivery of the first batch of one million contactless cards for public transport in Dubai.
  • Another payment option for TransLink users
    January 13, 2023
    Riders can now use Canada's Interac and no longer need a pre-paid Compass card
  • Thales to upgrade Taipei’s metro ticketing
    March 22, 2016
    As part of Taiwan’s Ministry of Transport and Communications’ initiative to respond to the need for wider interoperability, the Taipei Rapid Transit Corporation, which operates the concession for the metro network in Taipei, has opted for Thales’s fare collection solution, to be rolled out progressively throughout 2016. The upgrade covers the entire metro network, including more than 1,500 fare gates across 120 stations, with a daily flow of over 1.97 million passengers. The Thales solution includes the
  • Singapore looking to implement automatic fare collection system
    November 18, 2015
    Singapore’s The Land Transport Authority (LTA) is seeking industry’s views on the technology, equipment and services necessary to upgrade the current AFC system to support a hands free solution that will enable a commuter to take the public transport without the need to tap a fare card on the fare gates or processors in future. The LTA’s vision for the future is a fare payment system where technology will help detect and automatically register commuters in a bus or train, so long as the commuter has the far