Are Toll Roads Good for Us, Or Just a Massive Rippoff


Are Toll Roads Good for Us, Or Massive a Rippoff.

Toll roads have been a hot topic, for generations. There have been much-hated  toll roads since there were roads. What has changed is they way roads are funded.

The larger Australian cities are now lousy with expensive, private roads. Most of them are owned by Transurban, a company that paid just $112.1million on $2.9 billion on the 2015-16 tax year. That’s an effective rate of bugger-all. The system is not designed to provide good traffic flow or high quality roads, but to divert money into the pockets government donors.

Now, back to the tolls roads, with NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian calling it “toll mania” . She misspoke at a media, but did she?

In the last decade, Sydney has been ringed by expensive toll roads, and the M1/Northconnex tunnel is the latest expensive tunnel designed to get trucks of surface roads.

Tollways include the M7, M5, M2 and M1, and the outrageous re-tolling of the M4. Existing tollways such as the Sydney harbour Bridge, Eastern Distributor are under consideration for a 2-way toll rather than a toll in only one direction.

Take a quick look at the table below, and a car/bike in the Class A could easily use 4 or more of these each day, each way. Some of the tolls are capped, and others have a government rebate. Cars must carry a toll tag, while bikes have their plates captured and identified. Some have a distance-based fee, or a time-of-day fee, or one price no matter when you travel. Users have no hope of understanding the complex rates.

Operators have gone bust over the decades, so to “sweeten the deal,” the NSW government promised to underwrite the profit of the operator. Nice work if you can get it.

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ABOVE: Sydney Toll Roads

What’s the Alternative?

Proposals include a distance-based fee for all road users. At first it seems even worse than tolls, but the current toll/registration charge regimes will not cater for future needs. Such systems are in use in NZ since 1978, and in some European countries.

As the take-up up of hybrid and EV cars increases, the fuel taxes will fall, further tightening the purse for road building and maintenance. In a world’s worst practice, the Victorian government proposed taxing EVs and hybrids. After much opposition, the tax came in to being. Hybrids are charged 2.5cents per KM, and EVs at 2.5 cents.

Public Transport is another option

Public transport is time charged to convince traveller to off-peak where possible. Australia has poorly planned public transport that has no kept up with increase demand. This demand stepped up as the toll roads increased.

Charges by toll road

Effective 1 April 2021

Vehicle class definitions are different for each toll road. Check the definitions to work out which charge applies to you.

Rebates and assistance are available to eligible customers. See M5 Cashback Scheme and Toll relief – free registration for more information.

Hills M2 MotorwayEach direction / FixedToll Point Class A) North Ryde (Mainline) Class B) North Ryde (Mainline) Class A) Pennant Hills Road Class B) Pennant Hills Road Class A) Windsor Road Class B) Windsor Road Class A) Lane Cove Road Class B) Lane Cove Road Class A) Herring and Christie Roads Class B) Herring and Christie Roads Class A) M2 – NCX Class B) M2 – NCX. $8.20 $24.59 $4.10 $12.30 $2.90 $8.70 $2.42 $7.27 $4.09 $12.29 $4.10 $12.30
M5 South-West MotorwayEach direction / FixedClass A) Class B) All toll points$4.88 $14.64
Westlink M7 MotorwayEach direction / Distance basedClass A) cents/kilometre capped at Class B) cents/kilometre capped at$0.4204 $8.41 $1.2611 $25.23
Eastern DistributorNorthbound / FixedClass A) Class B) Northbound only$8.29 $16.58
Sydney Harbour Tunnel / Sydney Harbour BridgeSouthbound / Time of Day Weekdays (6:30am – 9:30am & 4:00pm – 7:00pm) Weekdays (9:30am – 4:00pm) Weekdays (7:00pm – 6:30am) Weekends (8:00am – 8:00pm) Weekends (8:00pm – 8:00am)Southbound only Same rate for all vehicles Peak period Shoulder period Off-Peak period Shoulder period Off-Peak period$4.00 $3.00 $2.50 $3.00 $2.50
Cross City TunnelEach direction / FixedClass A) Main tunnel Class B) Main tunnel Class A) Sir John Young Crescent Class B) Sir John Young Crescent$5.93 $11.86 $2.80 $5.60
Lane Cove TunnelEach direction / FixedClass A) Main tunnel Class B) Main tunnel Class A) Military Road E-Ramp Class B) Military Road E-Ramp$3.44 $11.51 $1.72 $5.76
WestConnex – New M4Each direction / Distance basedClass A) $ 1.42 flagfall + rate per kilometre Maximum toll Class B) $4.27 flagfall + rate per kilometre Maximum toll$0.5266 $8.52 $1.5798 $25.58
WestConnex – M8Each direction / Distance basedClass A) $ 1.42 flagfall + rate per kilometre Maximum toll Class B) $4.27 flagfall + rate per kilometre Maximum toll  $0.5266 $7.23 $1.5798 $21.70
WestConnex – M5EastEach direction / Distance basedClass A) $ 1.42 flagfall + rate per kilometre Maximum toll Class B) $4.27 flagfall + rate per kilometre Maximum toll  $0.5266 $7.23 $1.5798 $21.70
NorthConnexEach direction / FixedClass A) All toll points Class B) All toll points$8.20 $24.59
Written by Alan Zurvas

Alan Zurvas is the founder and editor of Gay Car Boys, Australia's leading LGBTQI+ automotive publication. Before launching GCB in 2008, Alan's automotive writing was published in SameSame.com.au and the Star Observer. With over 16 years of hands-on car reviewing experience, Alan brings an honest, irreverent voice to every review — championing value and innovation over brand loyalty.


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