Skip to main content

Vinci completes TollPlus buy

Highways group acquires remaining 70% of tolling software and back-office firm
By Adam Hill April 8, 2022 Read time: 1 min
TollPlus buy makes Vinci an immediate player in ETC market

Vinci Highways has completed its acquisition of toll back-office systems specialist TollPlus.       
 
The French group bought the remaining 70% stake it did not already hold in TollPlus, gaining it immediate entry to the burgeoning electronic toll collection (ETC) market.

A subsidiary of Vinci Concessions, it has held a 30% stake in TollPlus for the past six years and has been developing its free-flow tolling interests in the US (Texas and California), Ireland and India.

“With this acquisition, Vinci Highways benefits from one of the best back-office technologies on the market, and sustains its strategy of developing free-flow highways in the US, projects for which back-office software expertise is essential," says Belen Marcos, executive VP of Vinci Concessions and president of Vinci Highways.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Buttigieg: US falls short on pedestrian safety 
    March 26, 2021
    Roads should be designed around the human being, says US transportation secretary
  • Ferrovial to develop Florida eVTOL
    February 5, 2021
    Lilium Jet's ultra-low noise engines allow it to operate in urban areas, says company 
  • Q-Free wins important French tag order
    June 18, 2012
    Q-Free has received a tag order from Vinci Autoroutes valued at over US$2.5 million. With a network of 4,385 km under concession, including 4,310 km in service, Vinci is Europe’s leading motorway operator. Its four concession operating companies, ASF, Cofiroute, Escota and Arcour, serve the south and west of France, representing half of the country’s total motorway network under concession. Vinci motorways carry 2.2 million customers a day, with 1.5 million electronic toll subscribers.
  • Upgrade for Humber Bridge toll system
    August 20, 2013
    Work has begun on an ambitious US$8 million project to implement an innovative new electronic tolling system at the UK’s Humber Bridge, where the existing systems have remained largely unchanged since the bridge opened in 1981. The project is set to be completed by autumn/winter 2014 and will include a major redevelopment of the tolling plaza and systems, together with the creation of some of the first open tolling free-flow lanes in the UK. These will enable drivers to cross the Humber Bridge without s