Skip to main content

Using toll roads in Europe this summer? It'll cost you

Data from 44 countries highlights a range of fees on bridges, roads & tunnels
By Adam Hill August 4, 2025 Read time: 1 min
For whom the road tolls... (© Anna Yordanova | Dreamstime.com)

Tolling is a surefire way of maintaining and improving infrastructure, and allowing people and goods to move safely and efficiently along the world's roadways, tunnels and bridges.

But drivers face a range of tolls when using European roads this summer, finds research from UK van rental firm Northgate Vehicle Hire.

Using sources including Tolls.EU, the firm analysed available data in 44 European countries.

At the upper end of the scale were highways in France, Italy and Norway: for example, drivers travelling from Paris to Marseille (along the A6/A7) pay £52.59 one way, while Milan to Naples sets you back £50.73, with Boda to Oslo costing £45.16.

North Macedonia offers drivers the cheapest toll option, Northgate says, with the 37km route from Petrovec to Veles costing £1.15.

The Svinesundsbron bridge between Norway and Sweden costs just £1.74, while to get from Sweden to Denmark on the Øresundsbroen bridge costs £45.72. 

The Sozina tunnel in Montenegro and the Dublin Port tunnel in Ireland were the cheapest in Northgate's analysis, costing drivers £2.22 and £2.58, respectively.

A quarter of European countries, including Finland, Estonia, and Monaco, have no toll roads, the firm says.

Click here for the full list.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Masks and AI: the new mobility reality
    June 26, 2020
    French authorities are using artificial intelligence to track face covering compliance
  • Emovis wins 10-year Mont Blanc free-flow deal
    December 12, 2024
    Tolling system will cover 58km of A40 in France’s Haute-Savoie region
  • Intel, DG Move join IBTTA annual meeting
    June 23, 2015
    Among the participants in the program International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association’s (IBTTA) 83rd annual meeting are technology company Intel and the European Union’s Directorate- General for Mobility and Transport (DG Move). Hosted by Ireland’s National Roads Authority, the meeting takes place in Dublin, Ireland on 30 August to 2 September, bringing together toll industry professionals to share knowledge and ideas and discuss the most pressing topics in the field in a country that has gone thro
  • Increase in EU alternative fuel vehicle registrations
    October 30, 2015
    Total alternative fuel vehicle (AFV) registrations in the EU in the third quarter of 2015 increased by 13.4 per cent, reaching 127,661 units. Of these, electric vehicle (EV) registrations showed a substantial increase of 62.2 per cent, rising from 17,488 units in the third quarter of 2014 to 28,360 units in the third quarter of 2015.