Why people leave Chalo
- Live tracking gaps when bus GPS goes offline. Chalo depends on GPS units installed on buses by the operator. When a unit fails or a bus rotates onto an untracked route, the live position drops and the ETA reverts to the schedule.
- City-by-city feature parity is uneven. Mumbai gets Chalo Bus AC service, Bhopal gets Super Saver, Indore gets mobile tickets, and other cities get tracking only. Riders moving between cities often find that a feature they relied on does not exist on the next route.
- Pass and ticket flows are city-specific. A Mumbai bus pass does not work in Bengaluru, and the conductor’s machine differs between operators. Renewals also vary by operator.
- Coverage stops at the city limit. Chalo handles intra-city buses. Intercity and long-distance buses are not in scope, so commuters who switch between city bus and intercity coach still need a second app.
- No metro or rail integration. The app is bus-first. Multimodal planning across bus, metro, suburban rail, and walking happens outside Chalo.
If any of those push you to compare, here are 7 Chalo alternatives worth installing.
Which app should you choose?
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Moovit if you want a global transit planner that combines bus, metro, rail, and walking with real-time arrivals.
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Google Maps if you want one app for everything and your city’s transit data is well covered in Google’s directory.
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Citymapper if you live in or travel through Delhi or Mumbai and want polished multimodal journey planning.
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Tummoc if you commute in Bengaluru, Delhi NCR, Kolkata, or Jaipur and want a Made-in-India multimodal app with ticket and pass support.
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Namma Yatri if the first or last mile is an auto and the bus is the middle leg.
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Where is my Train if suburban rail and Indian Railways are part of your daily commute.
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redBus if the trip is intercity and you need a bus, ferry, or train ticket between cities.
Stay on Chalo in cities where Chalo’s mobile tickets and digital passes are live, your operator runs GPS-tracked buses, and Super Saver plans match your weekly volume.
Comparison table
| App | Best for | Modes | Coverage | Tickets | Free |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moovit | Multimodal planning | Bus, Metro, Rail, Walk | 100+ Indian cities, global | Limited | Yes |
| Google Maps | All-in-one navigation | Bus, Metro, Rail, Walk, Drive | Worldwide | No | Yes |
| Citymapper | Polished journey planning | Bus, Metro, Rail, Walk, Bike | Select Indian and global cities | Limited | Yes |
| Tummoc | Indian multimodal commute | Bus, Metro, Auto, Cab | 30+ Indian cities | Yes | Yes |
| Namma Yatri | Auto plus bus integration | Auto, Cab, Bike, Bus | 4 Indian cities | Pilot | Yes |
| Where is my Train | Suburban rail and Indian Railways | Train, Local | All India | Through partners | Yes |
| redBus | Intercity bus and train | Bus, Train, Ferry | India, SE Asia, LatAm | Yes | Yes |
1. Moovit — multimodal transit planner with real-time arrivals
Moovit is the global benchmark for public-transit planning. The app covers 100+ Indian cities and several thousand cities worldwide, with real-time bus and metro arrivals where operators publish a live feed. Journey planning stitches a route across bus, metro, suburban rail, and walking with honest end-to-end time estimates that include the walks to and from stops. For commuters who care about the actual door-to-door time, Moovit’s planner beats schedule-only apps.
Moovit vs Chalo on a bus-only trip is close in cities where Chalo’s live tracking is online. Moovit pulls ahead when the trip involves metro or rail legs that Chalo does not handle. The Moovit community-edits stop locations and routes, which keeps coverage current even where operator data is patchy.
Advantages:
- Real-time arrivals where operator feeds exist
- Multimodal journey planning across bus, metro, rail, walk
- Step-free routing for accessibility
- Service alerts and disruption notices
- Offline access to saved routes
Disadvantages:
- Mobile tickets only on a handful of routes outside India
- Tracking accuracy depends on operator data feed
- No bus pass support in India
Pricing: Free. No subscription.
Bottom line: Pick Moovit if your commute spans more than one mode and you want a planner that respects the walking legs.
2. Google Maps — transit alongside driving and walking
Google Maps treats transit as one of several modes alongside driving, walking, cycling, and ride-hailing. In Indian cities where Google has a transit data partnership, the app surfaces bus stops, metro stations, suburban rail, and stitches them into a multimodal route. The strength is the breadth: one app handles the bus to the metro to the walk to the final destination, alongside drive-time alternatives if you change your mind.
Google Maps vs Chalo on a city bus is a coverage comparison. In Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata, and several other metros, Google Maps has decent transit data and a usable journey planner. Chalo’s edge is the live bus position fed from GPS units on the buses themselves, which Google does not get for every operator.
Advantages:
- One app for driving, walking, transit, and ride-hailing
- Live traffic and travel-time estimates
- Indoor maps for major stations
- Offline maps for downloaded areas
- Trip history and saved routes
Disadvantages:
- Transit data quality varies by city and operator
- No mobile bus tickets or passes
- Live bus tracking depends on operator feeds, often less granular than Chalo
Pricing: Free. No subscription.
Bottom line: Pick Google Maps if you want one app for every mode and your city’s transit data is well covered.
3. Citymapper — polished journey planning
Citymapper is a city-focused multimodal planner with deep route awareness. The Indian footprint covers Delhi and Mumbai with strong metro and bus integration; outside India, the app is the default for London, Paris, New York, Berlin, and dozens of others. Journey planning blends bus, metro, rail, walking, cycling, and ride-hailing into ranked options with honest time and fare comparisons.
Citymapper vs Chalo in Delhi or Mumbai is mostly a polish call. Citymapper’s planner ranks the options by time, cost, and walking distance with a clear interface. Chalo’s strength is the live position of the bus you have already decided to take. Many commuters use Citymapper to choose the trip and Chalo to time the bus arrival.
Advantages:
- Multimodal journey planning with ranked options
- Strong metro coverage in Delhi and Mumbai
- Travel-time confidence intervals based on live data
- Save Home and Work for one-tap planning
- Disruption alerts when a line is down
Disadvantages:
- Limited Indian city coverage outside Delhi and Mumbai
- No bus tickets or passes
- Live bus position depends on operator feeds
Pricing: Free. Optional Citymapper Club subscription unlocks extras like trip planning across multiple cities.
Bottom line: Pick Citymapper for Delhi or Mumbai commutes where polished multimodal planning matters more than mobile tickets.
4. Tummoc — Made-in-India multimodal commute
Tummoc is a Bengaluru-built multimodal commute app with real-time data for BMTC and Bengaluru Metro, plus integrations with Delhi Metro, Kolkata Metro, Jaipur Metro, UP Metro, and several other Indian transit operators. The differentiator is the ticket layer: mobile tickets and metro QR support live alongside the journey planner, so the app does both legs Chalo handles separately.
Tummoc vs Chalo on a Bengaluru BMTC commute is the cleanest head-to-head. Tummoc shows live bus positions, planned metro transfers, and the wallet that buys both tickets. Chalo does live bus tracking and mobile bus tickets in supported cities but does not handle metro. Commuters who change modes daily get more from Tummoc.
Advantages:
- Real-time multimodal data for Indian transit operators
- Mobile bus tickets and metro QR support in major cities
- Cab, auto, and bike booking through partners
- BHIM UPI integrated for ticket purchases
- Made-in-India with deep local operator partnerships
Disadvantages:
- Coverage outside the listed cities is thinner
- App can feel busy with cross-promotions
- Metro QR support varies by operator
Pricing: Free. Tickets priced by the operator.
Bottom line: Pick Tummoc for daily multimodal commutes in Bengaluru, Delhi NCR, Kolkata, or Jaipur.
5. Namma Yatri — auto-first with growing transit integration
Namma Yatri started as a zero-commission auto-booking platform in Bengaluru and has expanded to Chennai, Delhi NCR, Kolkata, and other Indian cities, with growing bus integration on the Beckn open mobility protocol. For commutes where the trunk leg is the bus and the first or last mile is an auto, Namma Yatri handles the part Chalo cannot, with lower auto cancellation rates than the aggregators.
Namma Yatri vs Chalo is a complement, not a competitor. Many Bengaluru commuters use Chalo to track the BMTC bus and Namma Yatri to book the auto from the stop to home. The Beckn protocol means Namma Yatri can fold bus and metro data into the same trip view, and that feature is expanding by city.
Advantages:
- Zero-commission autos with lower cancellation rates
- Open Beckn protocol for multimodal trip data
- Fare meter pricing on autos, no surge
- UPI-native payments
- Expanding bus integration in supported cities
Disadvantages:
- Limited to a handful of Indian cities
- Bus and metro integration is newer and uneven
- Smaller in-app safety stack than the aggregators
Pricing: Free. Meter fare plus a flat platform fee. No surge.
Bottom line: Pick Namma Yatri to handle the first and last mile around a city bus commute.
6. Where is my Train — suburban rail and Indian Railways
Where is my Train tracks Indian Railways and suburban rail in real time, with offline-first design that works on patchy mobile data. The app shows current train position, expected platform, coach layout, and station-level arrival times. For Mumbai locals, Chennai suburban, Kolkata local, and intercity Indian Railways trips, it is the cleanest tracker available, with crowd-sourced location data that fills gaps in the official feed.
Where is my Train vs Chalo is a mode comparison rather than a feature one. Chalo handles city buses; Where is my Train handles trains. Many Indian commuters whose journey is rail-then-bus install both.
Advantages:
- Real-time train position with offline fallback
- PNR status and platform info
- Suburban local timetables for Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Delhi
- Coach layout and reservation chart preview
- Works on weak network through cell-tower triangulation
Disadvantages:
- No city bus tracking
- Ticket booking via partner redirects, not native
- Some intercity tracking depends on crowd-sourced data
Pricing: Free with light ads. No subscription.
Bottom line: Pick Where is my Train if your daily route includes Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, or Delhi suburban rail.
7. redBus — intercity bus and train tickets
redBus is the intercity layer that Chalo does not cover. The platform aggregates state-run and private bus operators across India and several Asian markets, with seat selection, live tracking on supported routes, and m-tickets that the conductor scans on boarding. For trips between cities (Bengaluru to Mysore, Mumbai to Pune, Hyderabad to Vijayawada) redBus is the default, with train and ferry tickets added more recently through partners.
redBus vs Chalo is a different distance scale. Chalo runs the city bus you take to work. redBus runs the overnight Volvo you take home for the weekend. Many Indian travellers install both and rarely use one for the other’s job.
Advantages:
- Largest intercity bus inventory in India
- Seat selection, m-tickets, live tracking on supported routes
- Train ticket booking via IRCTC partner
- Ferry tickets where supported
- Cashback and rPool carpool options
Disadvantages:
- No city bus tracking inside India
- Dynamic service fees can add up on cheap tickets
- Cross-promo notifications for trains, hotels, and rPool
Pricing: Free. Service fee per ticket.
Bottom line: Pick redBus for intercity bus and train trips that Chalo does not handle.
How to choose
Pick Moovit for multimodal commutes where bus, metro, and walking legs all need real-time data.
Pick Google Maps when one app for every mode beats a transit-only specialist.
Pick Citymapper in Delhi or Mumbai for polished multimodal journey planning.
Pick Tummoc for daily commutes in Bengaluru, Delhi NCR, Kolkata, or Jaipur that need tickets and tracking in one app.
Pick Namma Yatri to book the auto for the first or last mile of a bus trip.
Pick Where is my Train for Mumbai locals, Chennai suburban, Kolkata local, or any Indian Railways journey.
Pick redBus for intercity bus, train, and ferry tickets.
Stay on Chalo when your city has Chalo Bus AC, Super Saver, or mobile tickets live, your bus operator runs GPS-tracked buses, and your routes do not regularly involve metro or rail.
FAQ
What is the best Chalo alternative for tracking city buses?
Moovit is the closest direct alternative with real-time bus arrivals in 100+ Indian cities, dependent on the operator feed. Google Maps covers transit in most major Indian cities with similar caveats. In Bengaluru, Tummoc layers ticketing on top of live tracking.
Does Google Maps show live bus position in India?
In cities where the transit operator publishes a live GPS feed (Bengaluru’s BMTC, Delhi’s DTC and DMRC, several others), Google Maps shows live arrival times. Coverage and accuracy are below Chalo’s where Chalo runs its own GPS units on the buses.
What is the best app for Indian Railways tracking?
Where is my Train is the most reliable tracker for Indian Railways and suburban rail, with offline fallback and crowd-sourced data when the official feed lags. The IRCTC app handles ticket booking and PNR.
Can I buy bus tickets without Chalo?
Yes. Tummoc supports mobile bus tickets in supported cities. State-run operators (BMTC, DTC, BEST, MTC, others) increasingly offer their own ticketing apps. redBus handles intercity bus tickets nationwide.
Which app is best for the first and last mile around a bus stop?
Namma Yatri runs zero-commission auto bookings in Bengaluru, Chennai, Delhi NCR, and Kolkata, with lower auto cancellation rates than aggregators. Rapido covers bike-taxi for solo last-mile trips in 500+ Indian cities. Both work alongside a Chalo or Tummoc bus commute.
Is Chalo available outside India?
No. Chalo operates inside India. For multimodal transit outside India, Moovit and Citymapper have the broadest international coverage, with Google Maps as the universal fallback.