Skip to main content

Coronavirus: TfL suspends all road user charging

Transport for London (TfL) has temporarily suspended all road user charging schemes so emergency services can more easily travel around the UK capital during the coronavirus pandemic.
By Ben Spencer March 31, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
TfL temporarily halts road user charging schemes to help emergency services travel around London during the coronavirus pandemic (© Anizza | Dreamstime.com)

TfL says the charges are being lifted because driving to work is the simplest option for some critical workers – including National Health Service staff - in the current circumstances.
 
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has instructed TfL to temporarily suspend the congestion charge, ultra low emission zone and low emission zone to help critical workers get to work and ensure essential deliveries can take place.
 
“This is not an invitation to take to your cars. To save lives we need the roads clear for ambulances, doctors, nurses and other critical workers,”  Khan adds.
 
Additionally, NHS workers can also use Santander Cycles for free for journeys under 30 minutes. Docking stations near hospitals are being prioritised to ensure there is a regular supply of bikes for medical staff, TfL says.
 
Paul Cowperthwaite, TfL's general manager of road user charging, says: “Emergency services workers are absolutely fundamental to our response, but supermarket workers, utilities engineers, refuse collectors, and many more, also need to be able to travel to keep the city functioning.”

The UK government is advising people only to travel when it is absolutely necessary and says drivers must consider the wider implications when thinking about using their vehicles. TfL has reduced the number of tube stations open to keep the public transport network running. 

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • WJ Group marks out new territory
    May 27, 2020
    Company gears up to demarcate pop-up cycle and walking routes in England
  • TfL launches LoCITY project to cut urban emissions from road freight
    February 1, 2016
    Transport for London (TfL) has launched a new five-year industry-led programme to reduce the emissions of London's freight and fleet operators. The programme will work across the industry to increase the availability and uptake of low emission vans and lorries. It will bring together freight and fleet operators, vehicle manufacturers, fuel providers and the public sector. TfL says that 85 per cent of London's goods are transported by road and that freight makes up 17 per cent of London's road traffic.
  • Road user charging environmentally necessary
    February 27, 2012
    I like it when an otherwise unremarkable evening turns into something which stays in the mind awhile, and enlivened debate has that habit of planting seeds in the mind which over time grow into thinking with much wider application.
  • What's Next for Aimsun?
    October 4, 2023
    Aimsun is switching strategy from being a pure software firm to one that is focused on outcomes. The company’s CEO Alexandre Torday talks to Adam Hill and explains why