Europe’s urban mobility sector is experiencing a profound shift as cities grapple with congestion, emissions targets, and fragmented transport networks. While billions have poured into individual mobility solutions—e-scooters, bike-shares, ride-hailing—the real challenge lies in orchestrating these services into coherent, user-friendly ecosystems. Switch has secured €600,000 in funding to address this orchestration gap, building what could become the operating system for Europe’s shared mobility future. The funding comes at a critical juncture for European cities. Brussels mandates 55% emission reductions by 2030, whilst London’s Ultra Low Emission Zone expansion forces millions to reconsider transport habits. Switch’s platform aggregates disparate mobility services—from Lime scooters to Bolt rides—into unified booking and payment experiences, precisely what fragmented European markets require. EIT Mobility backs European urban mobility innovation EIT Mobility, the European Institute of Innovation & Technology’s urban mobility arm, led Switch’s funding round—a strategic choice reflecting the investor’s thesis around systemic mobility solutions. Unlike Silicon Valley’s winner-takes-all approach, European mobility markets demand interoperability across borders, languages, and regulatory frameworks. “Switch represents the infrastructure layer that European cities desperately need,” notes an EIT Mobility spokesperson familiar with the deal. “Rather than launching another scooter company, they’re solving the coordination problem that prevents existing services from reaching their potential.” This aligns with EIT Mobility’s €2 billion portfolio focus on sustainable urban systems rather than individual mobility hardware. The timing proves prescient. European corporates increasingly recognise that mobility-as-a-service requires neutral platforms rather than proprietary ecosystems. Switch’s vendor-agnostic approach resonates with European regulatory preferences for open competition over platform monopolisation. Platform strategy targets fragmented European markets Switch’s product addresses distinctly European challenges. Unlike US markets dominated by Uber and Lyft, European cities feature dozens of mobility providers—Tier, Voi, FREE NOW, BlaBlaCar—each with separate apps, payment systems, and coverage areas. This fragmentation creates user friction that Switch eliminates through unified interfaces. The company’s API-first architecture allows rapid integration with European transport authorities, crucial given varying municipal regulations across EU member states. Amsterdam’s mobility regulations differ markedly from Barcelona’s, yet Switch’s platform adapts to local compliance requirements whilst maintaining consistent user experiences. “European users don’t want to download seventeen apps to cross a city,” explains Switch’s founding team in their funding announcement. “We’re building the layer that makes sustainable mobility genuinely convenient.” The €600,000 will fund expansion beyond their initial market, targeting partnerships with major European cities planning integrated transport systems. Switch’s approach echoes successful European platform strategies—think Spotify’s music aggregation or Klarna’s payment orchestration. Rather than competing directly with mobility providers, Switch enhances their reach whilst capturing transaction value. This collaborative model suits European business culture’s preference for ecosystem partnerships over zero-sum competition. As European cities accelerate sustainable transport mandates, Switch positions itself as essential infrastructure. The funding signals investor confidence that mobility orchestration, not vehicle ownership, defines urban transport’s future. For European tech watchers, Switch represents pragmatic innovation—solving real problems without Silicon Valley’s reality distortion field.