Contactless payment now accepted on all National Express West Midlands buses

National Express West Midlands bus passengers can now pay for their journey with just a tap of a bank card.

After decades of only accepting exact change, every one of the bus company’s 1,600 buses will now take contactless.

Tom Stables, Managing Director of National Express West Midlands, said: “Now our customers won’t even have to work out what ticket they need.

“They can just tap a bank card on the reader and it will work out the fare for them. The first tap pays for one trip. Then, however many more trips you make that day, you will never be charged more than an adult day ticket. It really is that easy – and it’s always the same price as the adult cash fares.”

“We know this is what National Express West Midlands customers want. We trialled this system on a few routes in Coventry in February, and just in the first two days, a fifth of adult cash passengers switched to contactless.

“Since we rolled it out across the West Midlands, we’ve had about 100,000 transactions. We are now getting about 5,000 contactless journeys every day – that’s one every 5 seconds.”

Andy Street, Mayor of the West Midlands, said: “One of the things I hear repeatedly from users of public transport is that they want paying for travel to be easier and quicker.

“In addition to the convenience for passengers, there’s an important impact on congestion. The new technology speeds up buses because passengers spend less time buying tickets. They don’t even have to pick up a paper ticket – they just tap their bank card and sit down.

“This saves each customer just a few seconds. But across a long West Midlands bus route with over 100 bus stops, those seconds add up. In cities, the time taken up by passengers getting on a bus makes up between a quarter and a third of the bus’s total journey time.

“So by introducing contactless, National Express West Midlands could speed up bus journey times by up to ten per cent.”

Councillor Roger Lawrence, leader of the City of Wolverhampton Council and West Midlands Combined Authority portfolio lead for transport, said: “Building on the success of our Swift card, this step by National Express is a huge one towards a totally contactless system across all forms of public transport.

“The system National Express has adopted can talk to other systems. Transport for the West Midlands is working towards this system, which is similar to the one used in London, improving the experience of users and helping to keep the region moving.”

Customers have been telling National Express West Midlands how much they like the new system:

Victoria, who commutes on the 935 service, says: “I have always loved the simplicity of travelling on public transport around London, so was really pleased when I found out that the West Midlands had decided to adopt using contactless.

“This has saved me time on my journeys and is much more efficient for me as I no longer need to withdraw money and get change every time I catch the bus.”

And Jonathan, who uses the bus to go out socially, says: “I love the buses being contactless. I normally had change, but it’s so much easier to not have to worry about having it and finding it.”