Better real-time tracking for you.

And for everyone.

Just

Where’s your ride? GO knows.

You want to know precisely where your ride is. Not where it was, five minutes ago. So we’ve engineered a delay-free solution, with GO.

GO doesn't just send alerts when it’s time to catch your ride (and when your stop is coming up). GO also follows your vehicle’s location in actual real-time, and uses that data to help other riders. Tap GO: riders on your line will have up-to-the-second location updates.

No delays. No worries.

Curious about how many people you’re helping out when you use GO? Look for the happy face. You’ll see that number climb as you travel along.

And when you’re waiting for a ride yourself, that same happy face lets you know when your trip is crowdsourced.

Feels nice, right? 🙂 Yeah.

Tap on the happy face to see how many people you’ve helped this month and reveal your ranking compared to other riders on your line.

Hmm. My city’s transit system already has real-time info. How is GO better?

Great question. Here’s the thing: Depending on what kind of technology they’re using, their vehicle locations could be up to five minutes old. That might not seem like a lot... until you go out to catch your ride and it already came five minutes ago. GO, on the other hand, is really real-time. No guesswork, no ghost buses. GO is real people riding real vehicles, right now.

Neat! But what about my battery?

GO uses your phone’s GPS, which does indeed use a little bit of energy. We’ve managed to keep it down to about 5% of your battery for a 20-minute trip, and that estimate assumes you’re fiddling around with the screen on the entire time. If you’ve just got your phone in pocket, it uses even less.

How much data does GO use?

Barely any. That same 20 minute trip would use about 100k of data. That’s less than 1/15th the size of this GIF of a bus doing doughnuts.

And what about my privacy?

Your location and your data is completely anonymous, and is only shared with our servers while you’re using GO and actually on board the vehicle. As soon as you hop off, GO shuts off, and your vehicle’s location stops being sent to our servers.