Digital payments provider Visa has announced the launch of its Fleet 2.0 programme with 15 different partners, with the move supporting its global initiative to accelerate innovation in fleet and B2B mobility payments.
By rolling out the Fleet and Mobility ecosystem with 15 partners, Visa aims to advance B2B payments in the sector. The Visa Fleet 2.0 card comes as a unified solution providing increased flexibility, universal acceptance, real-time tracking, and comprehensive analytics. The company created the product to address a range of legacy issues and complexities within the fleet management industry, as more drivers admit their unhappiness with the challenges brought by existing payment solutions and the lack of a unified platform.
Expanded offerings and decreased operational complexity
Through this launch, Visa intends to offer digital fleet payments to scale financial flexibility and deliver increased control for managers and drivers, turning multiple cards into one credential. The solution equips partners with the ability to grow their offerings, simplify operational complexity, and benefit from additional revenue channels.
Moreover, Visa Fleet aims to come as a supporter for accelerating innovative digital solutions that can augment the sector by offering more choice and security, together with a variety of partners from around Europe. These include Cardlay, Carpay-Diem, Enfuce, Episode Six, Froda, G4S Telematix, Mynt, Nuek, Picafuel, Plan A, Pliant, RecieptHero, Stacc, The ai Corporation, and XXimo. Since the beginning of 2025, these partners have been joining Visa’s Ready for Fleet programme, with it offering them the tools, frameworks, and validation to ensure their solutions meet Visa’s standards for functionality, integration, and security.
The news comes just a few months after Visa announced that it was bringing Google Pay integration to Fleet Cards, allowing tokenization and push-to-wallet across the digital wallet ecosystem. The move focused on addressing the challenges of fleet data tags being tied to the plastic card chip. Currently, fleet data tags could be configured by the issuer, fintech, or processor, enabling custom data tags to be provisioned during the tokenization process.