Montreal

MasterCard wants STM to accept its credit card as ticket payment

Credit card company MasterCard is in talks with Montreal's transit authority to have its cards accepted as ticket payment, as an alternative to the OPUS card.

Credit card company has filed with Quebec's registry lobby to court Montreal's transit authority

MasterCard hopes its PayPass cards can be an alternative to the STM's OPUS cards. (CBC)

Credit card company MasterCard is in talks with Montreal's transit authority to have its cards accepted as ticket payment, as an alternative to the OPUS card.

The STM's Amélie Régis confirms the authority has met with MasterCard.

"Mastercard enrolled in the registry of lobbyists in order to present alternative payment solutions to the STM," she said in an email to CBC News.

"Everything is still very exploratory."

In its initial statement, MasterCard said it hopes the STM will consider the use of its Paypass technology for users taking the bus or metro.

Paypass cards, or "contactless" MasterCards, have an embedded computer chip called a radio frequency identification, or RFID, tag.

When waved near a payment terminal in a store, the chip supplies the card's number and expiry date through radio waves, avoiding the need to swipe or insert the card or have somebody handle it.

As it stands, the OPUS card, STM-issued tickets and exact change are the only way to pay for a transit trip.