With Apple Pay launching officially in October 2014, the world of mobile and contactless payments may have changed forever. But will we all prefer to pay with our mobiles over contactless cards? Zwipe wants to add security with a fingerprint sensor.
Apple is hoping that Apple Pay, a tap-to-pay service integrated into the iPhone 6 and Apple Watch, will help it dominate the $79.2 billion-a-year digital payments market. But can Apple succeed where so many have failed before, and truly replace our wallets with our phones?
With 2 million users, a deal with Starbucks, and $6 billion worth of transactions, Square is turning smartphones into checkouts, digitising loyalty schemes and reshaping how consumers spend – without using NFC technology.
With the release of Apple's iOS 8 in September 2014, Touch ID - the fingerprint sensor functionality on iPhone 5 and 6 - is coming to the forefront. As well as adding an extra layer of security, some brands are seeing the sensor as an opportunity to enhance m-commerce.
While most people pay for goods online in their native currency, as mobile payment systems mature - boosted by Apple Pay - and new currencies flourish, soon digital wallets may have a new job: helping pick the best currency for each transaction.