Guide

How to save on tolls without getting stuck on bad roads.

Saving on tolls is useful only when the alternative does not waste the savings through fuel, time, and stressful roads.

Compare a route now

Compare total route cost, not only toll cost

A detour that avoids tolls can still cost more when it adds distance, slow towns, and stop-start driving.

  • Estimate fuel cost from your vehicle consumption.
  • Check how much time a cheaper route adds.
  • Look at urban friction and smoothness, not only kilometers.

Use avoid-toll routes as comparison anchors

A toll-avoidance route is useful as a benchmark. Compare it against the recommended and fastest routes to understand the cost of comfort and speed.

Treat toll estimates with confidence labels

Until official tariff data is available, toll estimates should be considered directional. Confidence labels help you avoid false precision.

FAQ

Is avoiding tolls always cheaper?

Not always. A no-toll route can add distance, fuel consumption, and time. The cheapest practical route balances all of those factors.

Why compare smoothness and roundabouts?

Stop-start driving, dense junctions, and roundabouts can increase fatigue and fuel use even when a route looks shorter.