Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

New TransLink Campaign Urges Riders To 'Tap Your Card, Not Your Wallet'

Darpan News Desk, 09 Mar, 2018 02:12 PM
    With Compass Card readers accepting more payment options soon, you’ll need to remember not to tap your wallet or a phone case with multiple cards. Only tap the card you want to be charged. 
     
     
    Today, TransLink launched a campaign across our system to educate our customers on an important behaviour – they should tap their Compass Card, not their wallet or a phone case with multiple cards inside!
     
     
    The campaign sets the stage for the introduction of new convenient, payment options coming later this spring. Customers will soon be able to tap a contactless Visa or Mastercard credit card or mobile wallet on our card readers to pay their fare – “Tap to Pay!”
     
     
    No wallet-tapping!
     
    TransLink is reminding customers to tap only the card they wish to use to pay their fare. After the new technology is launched, tapping a wallet, phone case, backpack or purse – any item that holds multiple cards – could result in the unintended card being charged. Don’t be a “wallet-tapper” – change your behaviour and let your friends and family know, too.
     
     
     
     
     
    Next steps
     
    The launch of this new technology is still a few months away. In the meantime, we’re excited about the difference this will make for our customers, especially tourists and other infrequent riders. “Tap to Pay” means no more ticket line-ups, digging for change, or worrying about fare zones.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Drug Users, First Responders Share Stories From The Overdose Crisis' Front Lines

    Drug Users, First Responders Share Stories From The Overdose Crisis' Front Lines
    "Thank you so much for saving my life," Rea reads aloud to a crowd of 80 people packed into a community hall in the tony Vancouver neighbourhood of Kitsilano.

    Drug Users, First Responders Share Stories From The Overdose Crisis' Front Lines

    Home sales in B.C. rise in October despite higher prices, less choice

    Home sales in B.C. rise in October despite higher prices, less choice
    The British Columbia Real Estate Association says there were 8,677 residential sales across the province in October, a leap of 19.3 per cent over the same period last year.

    Home sales in B.C. rise in October despite higher prices, less choice

    Pender Island Beaver Battle: Parks Canada Asked To Reconsider Euthanasia

    Pender Island Beaver Battle: Parks Canada Asked To Reconsider Euthanasia
    PENDER ISLAND, B.C. — A battle over beavers is brewing on South Pender Island, B.C., where residents are vowing to save the animals from euthanasia.

    Pender Island Beaver Battle: Parks Canada Asked To Reconsider Euthanasia

    Ferry Service Resumes But No Power For Thousands Of Vancouver Island Customers

    Ferry Service Resumes But No Power For Thousands Of Vancouver Island Customers
     Ferry service has resumed on two routes between Tsawwassen and Vancouver Island after high winds cancelled sailings on Monday.

    Ferry Service Resumes But No Power For Thousands Of Vancouver Island Customers

    Amid Complaints, Quebec Town Forbids Nudity In Pool Locker Rooms

    Amid Complaints, Quebec Town Forbids Nudity In Pool Locker Rooms
    A Montreal-area town has decided to forbid all nudity in the locker rooms of its municipal pools — a level of discretion that has one man wondering if it doesn't go too far. 

    Amid Complaints, Quebec Town Forbids Nudity In Pool Locker Rooms

    Justin Trudeau Raises Concerns With Rodrigo Duterte Over Bloody Drug War In The Philippines

    Justin Trudeau Raises Concerns With Rodrigo Duterte Over Bloody Drug War In The Philippines
    Speaking to reporters in Manila after a summit of Southeast Asian countries, Trudeau says he told Duterte about the need for the rule of law in the Philippines.

    Justin Trudeau Raises Concerns With Rodrigo Duterte Over Bloody Drug War In The Philippines