NEW YORK, May 08, 2018 -- Masabi, the global leader in mobile ticketing and Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) based fare collection, today published its Mass Transit Rider Research Report: Key Factors Influencing Ridership in North America. The report, based on a survey of over 1000 US residents with access to public transit services, sheds light on some of the behaviors impacting public transit ridership across the nation and explores the effect new technologies and new urban mobility services, such as ridesharing, are having on the mobility ecosystem.
Key findings include:
Public transit remains underutilized
- 70% of Americans drive themselves on at least a weekly basis, while 40% never use public transit despite having access
- 19% of respondents are using public transportation every week, with 9% now using ridesharing every week
Citizens feel mostly optimistic about their public transit services
- 32% report that their local transit options are improving and 49% believe they are remaining the same
- Only 19% say the quality of their local transit is declining
Convenience is the top priority for passengers when choosing to ride public transit
- More than price (24%), travel time (8%) and even necessity (17%), convenience is the number one motivator, with 33% of respondents selecting it as their primary reason for riding
Ridesharing is connecting public transit for many facilitating multimodal journeys
- More than one third of our respondents (35%) are now combining ridesharing with public transit to reach a destination on at least an occasional basis, while 7% are combining ridesharing with public transit on at least a weekly basis
Convenience enablers attract riders
- Up to a quarter of potential riders report that convenience features such as combining modes of transit through an app, mobile ticketing and location tracking would cause, or already have caused them, to use public transit more often
Shared mobility use increases likelihood of public transit ridership
- 80% of weekly drivers never use public transit, while 95.5% of weekly rideshare riders use public transit, pointing to a future of reduced car ownership in favor of public/private urban mobility options.
"This report paints a picture of the future of public transit and how it can both learn from and operate in partnership with new mobility options, to the benefit of all," said Brian Zanghi, CEO of Masabi. "By implementing the types of convenience features found in ridesharing and other transportation alternatives and integrating multiple transit modes to deliver full first-last mile mobility, the emerging mobility ecosystem is set to provide a viable alternative to car ownership. Getting there, however, will require public/private partnerships between the agencies and mobility services that Americans already depend on every day.”
In Q4 2017 Masabi polled 1010 Americans who have access to, but do not necessarily ride, public transit. The full report contains a breakdown of the complete survey findings as well as recommendations for public transit agencies and officials based on the results. Masabi’s report shows that the frequency with which riders are combining services is much higher than others have shown and points to the potential for more interconnected transit systems.
To see a full breakdown of Masabi’s survey results, download the Mass Transit Rider Research Report here.
About Masabi
Masabi is the global leader in mobile ticketing and Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) based fare collection for transit. Masabi’s Justride is a cloud-based mobility platform unifying account-based and pre-pay ticketing into a single configurable solution. Justride’s SaaS architecture, ‘Mobile First‘ approach and BYOT philosophy, allow transport providers of all sizes around the globe to deliver innovation quickly, delighting passengers and reducing costs, while increasing efficiency and data insights.
The company’s Justride SDK, the world’s first and only mobile ticketing SDK for public transport, allows partners such as Uber, Kisio, Chalo and Transit App to request fare types, make payments, and deliver visual and barcode mobile tickets to a passenger within their applications.
Masabi works in partnership with more than thirty leading transit agencies and operators in North America, Europe, Australia and around the globe, including; New York MTA, Arriva, National Express, Keolis, Thames Clippers, Boston MBTA, LA Metrolink, The Hague and Las Vegas RTC. It has offices in London, New York, Boston and Cluj and investors include Mastercard and Keolis.
Contact information: Lauren Johnson [email protected]


Waymo Clarifies Role of Remote Workers Amid U.S. Robotaxi Safety Scrutiny
HSBC Cuts 10% of U.S. Debt Capital Markets Team Amid Ongoing Business Revamp
Boeing Secures 50 737 MAX Jet Order from Vietnam Airlines Amid Expanding Global Demand
Meta Platforms Cuts Equity Awards Again Amid Massive AI Investment Push
Bill Gates Pulls Out of India’s AI Impact Summit Amid Controversy and Event Mismanagement
YouTube Outage Disrupts Thousands Worldwide as Recommendation System Fails
Microsoft Plans $50 Billion AI Investment to Accelerate Growth in the Global South
Yotta to Build $2 Billion AI Data Centre Hub in India with Nvidia Blackwell Ultra Chips
Medical Groups Sue FTC Over Gender-Affirming Care Investigations Amid Trump Policy Dispute
OpenAI Nears $100 Billion Funding Round at $850 Billion Valuation: Bloomberg Report
Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup Recipe Debate: Hershey Responds as Cocoa Prices Shift
Stock Market Movers: NVIDIA and Meta Expand AI Partnership as Cadence Surges on Earnings
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton Sues Sanofi Over Alleged Healthcare Bribery Scheme
Microsoft Responds to ICE Surveillance Concerns Amid Azure Cloud Expansion
Nvidia Nears $30 Billion Investment in OpenAI, Replacing Previous $100 Billion AI Partnership 



