Skip to main content

TriMet to beta test new mobile ticketing app

Portland, Oregon, public transit services provider plans to begin testing the new TriMet tickets mobile app later this spring that will allow riders to conveniently buy and use fares from their smartphones. The agency is now taking applications from volunteers for the beta test of the mobile ticketing app designed by local software company GlobeSherpa. Bus, Max and Wes commuter rail passengers will be able to buy fares instantly, anywhere, at any time using an iPhone or Android phone, by downloading the fre
April 5, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Portland, Oregon, public transit services provider plans to begin testing the new 1272 TriMet tickets mobile app later this spring that will allow riders to conveniently buy and use fares from their smartphones. The agency is now taking applications from volunteers for the beta test of the mobile ticketing app designed by local software company GlobeSherpa.

Bus, Max and Wes commuter rail passengers will be able to buy fares instantly, anywhere, at any time using an iPhone or Android phone, by downloading the free app and registering a debit or credit card in the secure system. The tickets will have a combination of visually authenticated elements including a day-code, time and date stamp, and dynamic animation to provide security.

TriMet says it is among the first transit agencies in the US to test mobile ticketing. The app has been in development since last fall. It will make purchasing fares easier and faster. Passengers won’t have to keep track of paper tickets, search for exact change for the bus or use a ticket machine before boarding a Max or Wes train.

The mobile ticketing app will save the agency money by reducing the operating cost associated with printed fares. It will also bring it one step closer to a state-of-the-art electronic fare collection system that will eventually provide all passengers – not just those with smartphones – with easy and convenient ways to pay their fare

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • PayiQ exhibits Mobility as a Service
    October 8, 2015
    What is claimed to be the world’s first Mobility as a Service solution, PayiQ, can be viewed on the ITS Finland stand. The service, which is based on a smartphone app developed by iQ Payments, enables registered users to buy transit tickets, arrange ride-sharing and make a car- or bicycle-sharing booking.
  • Two French cities go live with Masabi mobile ticketing
    June 27, 2017
    Transport mobile ticketing provider Masabi has deployed its JustRide software development kit (SDK in the French cities of Orleans and Montargis, in partnership with public transport operator Keolis.
  • Revealed: the SESAMES Awards 2013 winners in full
    November 18, 2013
    Ten companies are celebrating this morning after the winners of the SESAMES Awards were announced at a gala reception in the Automobile Club de Paris (pictured) last night. The purpose of the 11 awards – the Oscars of the secure payments industry – is to recognise and reward the sector’s best innovations every year.
  • Metric wins New Jersey parking machine order after successful pilot
    April 17, 2012
    Metric Parking, a subsidiary of Hoeft & Wessel Group, has been awarded a contract with the US city of Hoboken, New Jesey, to supply 135 car parking ticket machines. During a successful 10-machine pilot project last year, the city saw a 30 per cent increase in revenue and additional parking spaces. These spaces were created by moving from the traditional single space meters to pay and display. Hoboken found that they are fitting two to three more cars on a given block with nearly half of all transactions now