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.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • A Texas star for ViaPlus
    May 13, 2024
    Firm will provide number-plate imaging in Houston for Harris County’s toll authority
  • ANPR integrity is as important as capability
    February 1, 2012
    Increasing the capability of automatic number plate recognition should go hand-in-hand with efforts to ensure number plates' integrity, says the ESVA's Viv Nicholas. Before we apply increasingly sophisticated technology to Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR), says the European Secure Vehicle Alliance's (ESVA's) executive director Viv Nicholas, there is a lot we can do to make the task of vehicle recognition simpler by addressing issues relating to the number plate itself.
  • Idris paves the way for loop based speed enforcement
    February 1, 2012
    With the Idris system now validated as a speed verification tool, the way is open for loops to be used in more complex enforcement applications. Diamond Consulting Services (DCS), developer of the Idris inductive loop-based vehicle detection and classification system, has recently successfully conducted validation trials which, the company says, open the way for Idris to be used for speed verification and loop-based sensors to be used for more complex applications such as speed-on-green and differential spe
  • Hawaii backs road user charging to replace fuel tax
    August 7, 2019
    Fuel tax revenue in Hawaii is falling - and even in paradise, someone has to pay. Adam Hill talks to Hawaii DoT’s Scot Uruda about a major change in the way the state funds road improvements All over the world, governments, transportation agencies and local authorities are casting around for new forms of revenue as the money from taxes imposed on fuel begins to trickle away. Spending is outstripping tax take as a combination of more efficient internal combustion engines and the increasing take-up of cars