

Enghouse Transportation - TM - Public Riders Pay Travel - Blog
Public transit in 2026 reflects a permanent shift toward digital-first mobility. Riders expect fast contactless payments, real-time journey updates, fare transparency, and seamless multimodal travel from public transit agencies.
The Global Transit Ticketing & Fare Collection Report (2025 Edition) analyzes fare collection systems across approximately 1,000 cities worldwide, including deployments of contactless smartcards, bank cards, mobile ticketing, and account-based ticketing architectures. The report highlights the growing diversity of fare media and regional approaches to open and interoperable payment systems.
The expectation is no longer modernization; it is integration. The International Association of Public Transport (UITP) identifies digitalization, interoperable ticketing, and integrated mobility platforms as key pillars of transit system modernization worldwide.
Here is what transit riders increasingly expect in 2026.
Tapping to pay is becoming the standard experience across major transit systems.
Modern deployments support:
New York’s OMNY system allows riders to tap a contactless card or mobile device across subways and buses, replacing legacy MetroCard infrastructure.
Contactless fare systems reduce cash handling, speed up boarding, and improve schedule adherence. As discussed in our article on how tap-and-go payments are shaping spontaneous travel, reducing payment friction also supports more flexible, short-notice travel behavior.
Account-Based Ticketing (ABT) stores fare entitlements in a secure back-office account rather than on a physical card. Riders tap with any linked credential, and the system calculates the correct fare in real time.
This model enables:
Transport for London’s contactless and account-based fare model is one of the most established examples of ABT on a scale. This pay-as-you-go fare innovation is being trialed on rail services in England, automatically calculating the optimal fare using app-based check-in. This gives agencies the ability to combine flexibility with predictable pricing, helping both riders and transit planners streamline travel and fare collection.
For agencies evaluating implementation strategies, our transit agency roadmap for mobile payment solutions whitepaper outlines key technical and operational considerations.
Fare capping ensures riders automatically receive the lowest available fare over a day, week, or month.
Benefits include:
Automatic fare optimization reduces complexity for both riders and customer service teams.
Real-Time Information Is Now Expected
Digital commerce has shaped riders’ expectations. Transit users want immediate updates and accurate arrival information.
Modern transit apps increasingly provide:
The California Integrated Travel Project (Cal-ITP) promotes open-loop payment standards and interoperability across agencies to improve rider experience and fare system consistency.
Supporting Unbanked and Cash-Reliant Riders
As digital systems expand, equitable access remains critical.
Best practices include:
Transit agencies increasingly design systems that combine digital innovation with inclusive fare access.
Incentive programs can also support adoption and engagement, as explored in Boosting ridership with transit rewards programs article.