Pick your stop
Search by postal code, your current location, or by tapping the map. Pair up to three bus stops for the routes you ride most.
BuzzStop is a desk-sized bus-arrival display with a built-in alarm. It pulls live timings from LTA and gently buzzes you when it's time to leave — so you never sprint for a bus again.
Clear alerts, intuitive controls, and smart timing — every feature is designed to help you stay aware without distraction.
Search by postal code, your current location, or by tapping the map. Pair up to three bus stops for the routes you ride most.
Set the bus services, time windows, and active days that match your routine. BuzzStop only buzzes when it matters.
A timely buzz tells you exactly when to step out — calibrated to your walking time so you catch the bus, not the back of it.
A crisp display you can read from across the room. No glare, no app to unlock — just the next arrival, always visible.
Volume scales to the room. Skip alerts on weekends, public holidays, or when you're WFH — automatically.
Plug in, open buzzstop.co/setup, pick your stops. No app to install, no account to create.
Up and running in about five minutes — no app, no account.
Scan the QR or open the link on any laptop. Works on Chrome and Edge.
Plug BuzzStop into your laptop with the included USB-C cable. The screen lights up showing a setup link.
Open buzzstop.co/setup (or scan the QR on the back) and the wizard walks you through Wi-Fi, bus stops, and alert schedule.
Unplug and place BuzzStop wherever you like. Live arrivals and your alerts work automatically from here.
Built on the same ESP32 platform that powers tens of thousands of indie hardware projects. Firmware is open and inspectable — you can flash your own if you ever want to.
View source & firmware on GitHub* Based on a typical 10-minute daily alert schedule. Actual battery life varies with alert frequency, Wi-Fi signal, and ambient temperature.
Free local shipping. Usually dispatched within 2 business days.
BuzzStop started as a side project to solve a daily annoyance — sprinting for buses you could have caught easily. Today it's a small, independent hardware brand based in Singapore, building things we'd use ourselves.
Every unit is hand-assembled, flashed, and tested before it ships. If something breaks, you talk to the people who built it.