Citymapper is lowering the paywall around its premium features and introducing a new subscription plan purely for removing ads.
The move comes less than two months after the popular transit and travel planning app was scooped up by mobility tech company Via.
London-based Citymapper, which gives city-dwellers real-time transport and routing information across hundreds of cities in Europe, Asia, and the Americas, has dabbled with various ways of monetizing through the years, including through a paid bus service, multi-transport transport subscriptions, and an enterprise offering. Then back in September, the company launched a new subscription-based service that removed ads from the app and introduced a slew of premium features, including lock-screen navigation, bus-only routes and turn-by-turn voice navigation.
Costing $2.99 a month or $19.99 a year, Citymapper Club, as the service is called, was evidently not enough to salvage the business as Via swooped in to buy the company six months later, in what was widely regarded as a firesale (though no acquisition price was ever confirmed).
Moving forward, all previous premium features will be free for all, with a new half-price $1.49 monthly fee ($9.99 per year) for those wanting to remove advertising.
Acquiring the transit data of million of urban travellers was clearly a big selling point for Via when it bought Citymapper, so it makes sense that it would look to encourage more usage by making all the features free to use. And by keeping an ad-free subscription in place, it allows the company to cover its costs and directly monetize a product that it now has to maintain alongside its existing properties.
The premium features are available to all users via the latest Citymapper app update that quietly rolled out last week on Android and iOS.
Some features are limited to a specific platform for now though, for example lock-screen navigation is only available on iOS, whereas a feature that shows you the best time to leave for your destination is limited to Android.
Citymapper lowers the paywall for premium features but keeps monthly subscription for removing ads by Paul Sawers originally published on TechCrunch
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Paul Sawers, Khareem Sudlow