Skip to main content

Q-Free extends Norway tolling deal

National back office operation handles one billion transactions per year
By Adam Hill October 6, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Q-Free handles 90 million transactions a month on Norway's toll roads (© Janusorlov | Dreamstime.com)

Q-Free has extended its tolling back office deal with the Norwegian Public Roads Administration (Statens Vegvesen), which runs national toll collection system AutoPass.

The new arrangement is worth approximately 30m NOK ($3.2m) depending on transaction volumes and runs until the middle of 2021.

Q-Free manages the transactions for several hundred toll stations nationwide, regardless of which company they are run by: drivers take up an AutoPass contract and have an electronic toll payment tag in their vehicle.

"It is close to 90 million transactions per month, which is one billion per year", explains Q-Free CEO Håkon Volldal. 

The contract has been running "close to 20 years", Volldal says, and it is a complex system.

"There are different rules in different regions and cities," he adds. "We check the tags and licence plates, collect the toll data, validate it and make it ready for billing."

AutoPass has been extended to cover ferry connections, "so there is no need to handle cash on ferries".

As well as tolling, Q-Free is active in advanced traffic management systems (ATMS) and Volldal told ITS International: "We see that 2020 will be a catastrophic year but we've held up pretty well. Things take more time and our customers are impacted by lower traffic volumes. But there are opportunities both on the tolling and ATMS side of the business."

The company is bidding on several toll projects around the world, he says. "We're quite active in Australia and Thailand and we hope that the US will come back from Covid-19."
 
Q-Free is based in Trondheim, Norway, and employs around 400 staff.

Related Content

  • More AutoPass orders for Q-Free
    April 1, 2014
    Q-Free has strengthened its activities in Norway with the extension of four existing service agreements for the AutoPass system, together with two new AutoPass orders and increased capacity in the existing central systems agreement. The orders, from the Norwegian Public Roads Administration, are worth a total of US$4 million, with potential for a further US$2.5 million over the lifetime of the projects. “These contracts confirm that we have an attractive portfolio offering in our home market in Norway
  • Q-Free wins $6.9m West Virginia traffic deal
    March 29, 2021
    State-wide advanced traffic management solution continues relationship begun in 2008
  • Q-Free and Raytheon bring MassDoT toll into focus 
    May 14, 2020
    Contract aimed at reducing need for manual review of images
  • Q-Free AutoPass service and maintenance contracts extended
    February 25, 2014
    Q-Free has been awarded orders to the value of value of US$4 million for the extension of six out of eleven previous contracts for the service and maintenance of Norway’s AutoPass system. The new contracts will take effect in the first quarter of 2014 and the remaining contracts are to be negotiated in the near future. Administered by the Norwegian Public Roads Administration, the AutoPass system enables automatic collection of roads tolls via a DSRC-based radio transponder on the vehicle’s windscreen