The Virgin Islands Taxicab Commission must implement an electronic payment system following Acting Governor Tregenza A. Roach’s approval of legislation Nov. 25, marking a significant shift in how taxi drivers and passengers conduct transactions across St. Thomas, St. John, and St. Croix.
The mandate, approved through Bill No. 36-0148, arrives at a time when the tourism industry is recovering and residents increasingly expect digital payment options. Yet the move raises practical questions about how small taxi operators will adapt to the technology and whether implementation costs will be passed to drivers or passengers.
What the Law Requires
The legislation amends Title 3, V.I. Code, requiring the Taxicab Commission to establish an electronic payment infrastructure. The law does not specify which payment methods—credit cards, mobile apps, digital wallets—the commission must accept, leaving implementation details to agency leadership.
Roach, acting in the governor’s absence, signed the bill along with four other measures during the 36th Legislature’s November session. The electronic payment requirement aims to modernize the territory’s taxi industry and accommodate visitors accustomed to cashless transactions.
Why Now?
Post-pandemic travel patterns have shifted consumer expectations. Many tourists arriving in the USVI expect to pay for services without carrying cash. A 2024 industry survey found that 68 percent of visitors to Caribbean destinations prefer digital payment options when available.
For St. Thomas residents, electronic payments could streamline airport and ferry terminal transactions, reducing wait times and improving driver safety by minimizing cash handling.
The Driver Question
Implementation remains unclear. The Taxicab Commission has not publicly addressed how drivers will acquire payment devices, process transactions, or handle technical failures. Processing fees for credit and debit card transactions typically range from two to four percent, costs that could strain operators working thin margins.
Smaller operators—particularly those in St. Croix and St. John who rely on limited daily trips—may face challenges affording equipment and training. Internet connectivity issues, common in remote areas of the territory, could create operational headaches.
Next Steps
The Taxicab Commission has not announced a timeline for rollout. The agency typically operates under the Department of Commerce, which oversees licensing and regulations. Industry stakeholders expect the commission to hold meetings with drivers before implementation begins.
Whether the USVI joins other Caribbean destinations like Puerto Rico and the Bahamas in standardizing digital taxi payments depends on how well the commission navigates driver concerns and technological constraints.








