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Starting this week, you’ll no longer need a Clipper card to ride BART. On Wednesday, the transit system will become the first ...
So it went for dozens of BART riders Wednesday, as BART debuted its new Tap and Ride system of payment that allows riders to ...
Starting Wednesday, riders on BART will be able to use their bank cards in a new Tap and Ride fare program that removes the ...
Here's what riders need to know about the launch, including how it works, which cards are valid, and why some will still need ...
Starting Wednesday, riders on BART will be able to use their bank cards in a new Tap and Ride fare program that removes the ...
The tap-to-pay feature launches the week of Aug. 18, but there are some things to know regarding "card clash" and transfer ...
A change coming to BART Wednesday could make it a lot easier to get on board. Commuters will be able to pay at the fare gates ...
Bay Area Rapids Transit (BART) expanded its usable forms of payment on Aug. 20, now accepting contactless debit and credit ...
You'll soon be able to pay for BART the same way you pay for everything else --- by tapping your debit or credit card. But, is Clipper Card being phased out completely?
On Dec. 15, BART will stop accepting EZRider fare payment cards, and the transit agency is urging its 40,000 EZRider card holders to activate Clipper cards so they continue to have the convenience ...
BART paid Cubic $600,000 for the 40,000 cards, which included $11 of prepaid fares per card, plus the usual $3 Clipper card purchase price — which covers the cost of manufacturing — and a $1 ...
BART has approximately 150,000 plastic Clipper cards in its inventory. Goodwin said that 156,992 cards were sold across BART’s system in the month of May alone.
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