Tools and solutions for EU public sector institutions
Public transport websites need to help people make decisions quickly: which service to take, when it departs, what it costs, and whether anything has changed. For operators and authorities, that means clear timetables, dependable service updates, accessible design, and information that works well on mobile as well as desktop.
Passengers need to know whether the timetable they are viewing is current and relevant to their stop, route or date of travel. When schedules are buried in documents, spread across multiple pages, or updated inconsistently, people lose confidence in the information and may miss services.
Many journeys involve transfers, temporary stop changes or different service patterns at different times of day. If routes, stops and interchange points are not explained clearly, passengers struggle to plan more complex trips and customer service teams receive avoidable enquiries.
Passengers often need simple answers: which ticket applies, how much it costs, where it can be bought, and whether concessions or zones apply. When this information is split across separate pages or written in operational language, mistakes and confusion are more likely.
Transport information must be usable by people with disabilities, older users, people with limited digital confidence, and those accessing the site on the move. If the website has poor contrast, unclear navigation, inaccessible documents or weak mobile usability, some passengers cannot plan journeys independently.
We structure timetable and disruption information so passengers can quickly find the right route, stop, direction and service status. The result is a clearer journey-planning experience, with update workflows that help teams publish changes promptly and consistently.
We design route pages and journey-planning pathways that explain stops, directions, interchange points and service variations in plain language. This helps passengers understand not just the route itself, but how to complete the full journey with fewer avoidable mistakes.
We organise ticket types, prices, concessions, zones and purchase options into a structure that is easy to compare and understand. This reduces ambiguity and makes it easier for passengers to choose the correct fare before they travel.
We assess the website against recognised accessibility requirements and review key passenger tasks such as checking departures, reading disruption notices and understanding fares. We also consider mobile use, keyboard navigation, colour contrast, document accessibility and multilingual content needs.
We help transport organisations maintain reliable public information through structured content governance, technical monitoring and practical reporting. This supports procurement accountability, reduces publishing risk, and gives internal teams a clearer basis for continuous improvement.
It should make the main journey-planning tasks straightforward: finding the right route, checking departure times, understanding transfers, and seeing any service changes. Clear stop information, route logic and mobile-friendly layouts are often as important as the planner itself.
Passengers need information that is easy to locate, clearly dated and consistent across the website. Internal publishing workflows should make it straightforward to update service changes quickly, especially during disruptions, planned works and seasonal timetable revisions.
Usually, yes. Networks differ in route complexity, ticketing models, service areas, passenger groups and language requirements, so the information structure should reflect how that operator actually works. A good solution also needs to fit public sector obligations such as accessibility, GDPR and procurement governance.
The transport company must own the domain and hosting, and invoices should be issued by the direct service provider.