Hong Kong residents have waited a long time for Apple Pay Octopus support to go live, but it’s finally happened. The rollout began yesterday, and officially launches today …
The company made the announcement on its website.
Octopus supports Express Transit, so you don’t need to unlock your iPhone or double-press the side button on an Apple Watch: just hold your device close to the reader.
Octopus on iPhone or Apple Watch simplifies the way you ride transit and shop. Breeze through the turnstiles or pay at the retail outlets just by tapping your iPhone or Apple Watch to the Octopus reader. No need to open an app or wake your device. Check your balance and skip the queues by topping up using your favourite credit/debit/ATM card, or from your bank account without service fees.
Octopus is available in Adult and Elder types, requiring a refundable deposit of HK$50, and has a stored value limit of HK$3,000.
You can use it on an iPhone 8 or above, or an Apple Watch Series 3 or above.
All the usual top-up options remain available.
We first learned it was coming almost a year ago, with confirmation the following month and more details emerging in September. However, while it was promised for later the same year, it has only finally arrived this week.
Apple Pay Octopus tip: register a new card
The company says you can transfer your physical Octopus card to Apple Pay.
However, Time Out notes that you may instead want to register a new one.
To do so, simply open Octopus App, tap “Add”, select “Transfer Octopus Card”, and follow the instructions.
Express Transit does make running out of battery power less likely, as it will continue to work in low-power mode, but it’s still reassuring to have a physical card as a backup. Additionally, there have been reports of the transfer failing in such a way that the Apple Pay card is not activated but the physical card ceases to work.
Also heard of issues with transferring cards, might wanna mention it. Long lines at MTR stations because the physical card would get disabled but the virtual one wouldn’t activate pic.twitter.com/5wFggAkv21
— Julian Schiavo (@_julianschiavo) June 2, 2020
Apple also has a microsite with more information.