Stop guessing when your bus will arrive. GPS tracking apps show you its exact location in real-time, and we compare the best options to get you to your stop on time.
You know the feeling. Staring down an empty street, wondering if the bus is two minutes away or twenty. Printed schedules are promises, not facts. They don't account for traffic, construction, or the Honda Civic that just broke down in the middle of the road.
What you need is an app showing you exactly where the bus is, right now. This isn't magic. It's just GPS. Most buses have a tracker that sends its location to a server, which pushes the data to your phone. You see a moving dot on a map. That's your bus.
There are a few solid choices for bus-tracking, and the best one usually depends on where you are.
Transit is probably the best place to start. When you open it, it immediately shows the closest bus and train lines and when they’re actually arriving. It's designed for that "oh crap, when's the next one?" moment. The interface is simple, and it uses Apple Maps data, which feels a little smoother than some of the others. It also has a feature called "GO" that buzzes your phone when your stop is coming up.
Moovit is the one you try if Transit doesn't cover your city. Its main advantage is that it works almost everywhere, in over 3,500 cities. It’s also good at mashing together different kinds of transportation—bus, train, scooter, walking—to map out the fastest route. And it has solid accessibility features for visually impaired riders.
Citymapper is king in huge cities like New York, London, or Paris. It has a busy, data-heavy interface that throws a lot at you, from comparing trip costs to estimating the calories you'll burn. If you live in a major metro area, Citymapper often has the most accurate data because it pulls from so many local sources.
Good apps do more than just track a bus. They let you plan a whole trip, warn you about delays, and sometimes even handle your payment.
This saved me once. I was in a new city, phone at 8%, and had to get to a meeting. It was 4:17 PM. The paper schedule was useless, but the app showed a bus was just three minutes away. I made it. Without that live dot, I would’ve grabbed a cab.
The data comes from the GPS trackers, but it also comes from you. When you ride with the app open, you're helping confirm the bus's location and speed. You're making the system smarter for the next person.
I usually tell people to start with Transit because it's so straightforward. If it doesn't work well where you live, or if you need to plan more complicated trips, then check out Moovit or Citymapper.
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