![]() ![]() ![]() However, it was not the digital side of the product that interested me most, but the simple economic saving. You manage the pass inside the Citymapper app like any other fintech-y card, and it gives you access to view your journeys and control the limited other features the card has. What does the Citymapper Pass offer?Īt it’s core, the Pass is simply a pre-paid Mastercard, connected to your Citymapper account that acts as a replacement for your Oyster card. Now, after using it for around five months, I can safely say it hasn’t disappointed. We are so used to companies going the other way that I was very interested in seeing what they had to offer. It was also quite cool to see a company and a product move from the digital into the physical. Every journey I take in London I take based on Citymapper’s recommendation, so when I received the invite, I was extremely interested to learn more. Other than Uber, I think there are few other apps I rely on so heavily and trust so much. On top of this, I was and still am a HUGE Citymapper fan. I wasn’t organised enough to buy a weekly oyster every week, but was finding that my travel, including at weekends, was averaging well above what I would have paid for a TfL travelcard. I was spending more and more of my income on travel and feeling more and more out of control. ![]() Having not signed up to a new fintech card in at least two weeks, I knew I had to get my hands on it.Īt the time I lived in Fulham, and was commuting every day to and from work using at least 2 buses and a tube (grim I know). Earlier this year, towards the end of February, I received an email from Citymapper offering me early bird access to their new product - an Oyster card rival designed especially for London. ![]()
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