
It’s a dream of busy transit riders to be able to
quickly and conveniently pay fares with the one thing that we always
seem to have handy—our phones. In today’s Android Pay demo at Google
I/O, we got to see the experience that will soon be reality for
Tube-riding Londoners.

Using actual TfL turnstiles onstage, senior director of product development Pali Bhat showed how riders simply tap in and out of turnstiles with their phones, with the fare deducted automatically from their bank or credit card on file. “For those of us who have had a Hillary Clinton moment in subways,” joked senior vice president of ads and commerce Sridhar Ramaswamy. Har har.
Besides making transit transactions painless for passengers, there are a slew of advantages for this type of payment on the transportation agency side. The system won’t need to install or maintain as many expensive ticketing kiosks, keeping infrastructural costs down. And TfL will be able to collect a ton of very nuanced data about ridership this way, which will almost certainly lead to more efficient service. Down the road, the technology could eventually be universal, so passengers wouldn’t ever have to worry about learning the ticketing systems in every city they visit. The overall transit experience will be much better everywhere, which is why the American Public Transportation Association called for the switch to NFC payments earlier this year.
Of course, paying with Android Pay today requires that cities have the right turnstiles installed. A handful of US cities are experimenting with NFC payments. Other cities, like Los Angeles, already use a similar contactless fare reader like TfA does and can easily make the switch. But many of the biggest transit systems, including New York City, still do the swipe cards. The MTA recently said that mobile payments wouldn’t be possible for at least five more years.
Updated to note that TfL already supports Apple Pay and Samsung Pay.


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