Bus travellers to Johor can use QR codes to clear immigration in Woodlands, Tuas checkpoints trial
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Similar to those using private vehicles, bus travellers can generate a unique QR code on the MyICA app.
PHOTO: ICA
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SINGAPORE – Bus travellers will be able to use QR codes to enter and exit Singapore’s two land checkpoints during a trial starting from the end of November, said Singapore’s Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) on Nov 21.
Eligible travellers on the trial at the Woodlands and Tuas checkpoints will include Singapore residents – citizens, permanent residents and long-term pass holders – as well as foreigners who have previously visited the Republic.
They will join others travelling from or to Johor by car, motorcycle or even bicycle, who can already opt to clear immigration at Singapore checkpoints with QR codes.
Prior to the roll-out of the initiative in March
The trial will begin on Nov 23 for those travelling through Tuas and the Second Link, and on Nov 28 for travellers using the Woodlands Checkpoint and the Causeway. Similar to those using private vehicles, bus travellers can generate a unique QR code on the MyICA app.
Travellers can opt to generate a unique individual or group QR code and select “Bus” as the vehicle type on the app, which can be downloaded off official Android and Apple app stores.
The trial will be conducted at selected automated lanes and special assistance lanes (SALs) with accompanying signs at the arrival and departure bus halls of both Singapore’s land checkpoints, said ICA, with officers present to provide assistance.
Up to four people can use a single QR code generated for a group of travellers. The group will scan the QR code at SALs and enter the first gantry together, before verifying their biometrics individually.
After scanning their generated QR codes at the passport scanning area, the second step of clearance will involve verifying travellers’ biometrics, namely their face and iris image, or fingerprints.
ICA encourages eligible bus travellers to participate in the trial to help fine-tune its processes.
Currently, both of Johor’s land checkpoints are also conducting QR code immigration trials for Malaysian bus and motorcycle travellers,
The QR code trials using the MyRentas app which started in June for bus travellers using the Johor Bahru checkpoint has significantly reduced travellers’ peak-hour waiting times from around two hours to 15 minutes, the app’s vendor said in October. Waiting times for bus travellers using the Second Link to enter Johor were reduced from 90 minutes to 15 minutes.
The land crossings connecting Singapore and Johor are among the world’s busiest, with an average of 400,000 people using both Johor checkpoints each day, Malaysian Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail told Malaysia’s Parliament on Nov 18.
Nearly 118 million travelled through both checkpoints from January to October 2024, an increase of 17 per cent from the previous year, he added.

