Chinese city fully launches face-scanning metro check-in service

ZHENGZHOU -- Zhengzhou, capital of Central China's Henan province, has become the nation's first to apply facial recognition technology at all its metro stations, according to Zhengzhou Metro.
Instead of using a metro card or scanning a QR code on mobile phones, commuters in Zhengzhou can have their face scanned and the fare automatically deducted from a registered account starting from December 3.
In September, Zhengzhou began providing face-scanning check-in service along the entire Metro Line 1 and the first section of Line 14 to give passengers a better experience of quick pass access. Now the service has been expanded to cover all metro lines.
By logging into Zhengzhou Metro's official APP and follow instructions to complete the face authentication, commuters can scan their faces to enter the subway and the fare will be automatically deducted via a pre-set payment method.
Now nearly 200,000 passengers have embraced the technology in Zhengzhou, and an average 10,000 commuters are paying metro fares by scanning their faces every day.
A number of Chinese cities, including Shenzhen, Jinan, Shanghai and Nanjing have used facial recognition technology on some of their metro lines.
- China's 2025 summer box office surpasses 2024 as domestic films take the lead
- China targets online abuse of military veterans ahead of V-Day
- Qingdao-based area emerges as rising hub for regional growth
- Port city ramping up educational resources
- Macao International Airport gets materials for expansion job
- Hefei metro station marriage ceremony stuns international bloggers