The tap-and-pay rollout will be limited at first to the 4/5/6 subway lines between Grand Central Station in Manhattan and Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn for single ride fares, eliminating for now discount fares or timed passes. Buses in the New York borough of Staten Island will also let pas...
You can now gain entry to any station of the New York City Subway with the tap of a phone, instead of the (famously finicky) swipe of a MetroCard. The Metropolitan Transportation Authorityannounced Thursdaythat it had completed the rollout of tap-to-pay scanners at all subway stations ...
However, the MetroCard will remain for the foreseeable future, working in tandem with the new tap-to-pay functionality through at least 2023.In the interim, The MTA will begin phasing in the new NFC payment terminals at 500 subway turnstiles and 600 buses by late 2018. The more than half...
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A small number of subway riders in New York City this week complained of a bug in Metro Transit Authority (MTA) tap-and-go turnstiles that inadvertently activates the Apple Pay Express Transit feature on user iPhones, resulting in double billing. ...
Riders can now tap their phones or credit cards to pay their fare instead of using a Charlie Card. The system is available on buses, the Green Line, the Mattapan Trolley and at subway fare gates. Similar systems already exist in cities like New York and Chicago. All smartphones, including...
Starting May 31, riders can tap to pay and ride at subway stations along the 4/5/6 lines between the Grand Central-42ndSt. station and the Atlantic Ave-Barclays Center station, and on all Staten Island buses. Over time, all New York City subway lines and bus routes will accept...
Tap-to-pay technology is, of course, common for public transportation in other major cities, such as the tube in London, Charlie card in Boston, and the Clipper card in San Francisco. But New York City has relied on an antiquated swipe card system since 2003, when it ...
Assuming you mean the 50th St. and 8th Ave. subway station, then yes, by public transit the best way is usually AirTrain from JFK to Jamaica station then E train to 50th St. You can tap and pay for both with a contactless credit card or payment app. ...
In New York, for example, if you want to get on the subway, you just tap your wrist on the turnstile and pass through. The charge goes onto your linked Apple Pay card with no other interaction from you. You don't even need a MetroCard. In some cities like San Francisco, ...