What States Have Toll Roads – Toll Shack

What States Have Toll Roads

Many U.S. states have toll roads, bridges, and tunnels. Some states have extensive toll systems, while others have only a few toll facilities. Here’s a list of states that have toll roads or toll facilities, categorized by region:

Northeast & Mid-Atlantic:

  1. Maine – Maine Turnpike (I-95).
  2. New Hampshire – Several turnpikes, including the Everett Turnpike.
  3. Vermont – No traditional toll roads, but a few toll bridges.
  4. Massachusetts – Massachusetts Turnpike (I-90), tunnels, and bridges.
  5. Rhode Island – Newport Bridge and proposed truck tolls on highways.
  6. Connecticut – Currently no toll roads, but previously had tolls.
  7. New York – New York State Thruway (I-87/I-90), bridges, and tunnels.
  8. New Jersey – New Jersey Turnpike, Garden State Parkway, Atlantic City Expressway.
  9. Pennsylvania – Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-76), various bridges and expressways.
  10. Delaware – Delaware Turnpike (I-95) and SR 1.

Southeast:

  1. Maryland – Baltimore Harbor Tunnel, Fort McHenry Tunnel, Chesapeake Bay Bridge.
  2. Virginia – Dulles Toll Road, various express lanes in Northern Virginia.
  3. West Virginia – West Virginia Turnpike (I-77/I-64).
  4. North Carolina – NC Quick Pass lanes (I-77 and other express lanes).
  5. South Carolina – Southern Connector (I-185).
  6. Georgia – Georgia Express Lanes (I-75, I-85), toll bridges.
  7. Florida – Extensive toll system including Florida’s Turnpike, SunPass system, and various expressways (e.g., SR 528, SR 408, SR 417).

Midwest:

  1. Ohio – Ohio Turnpike (I-80/I-90).
  2. Indiana – Indiana Toll Road (I-80/I-90), Ohio River bridges.
  3. Illinois – Illinois Tollway system (I-90, I-294, I-355, etc.).
  4. Michigan – Mackinac Bridge, Blue Water Bridge.
  5. Wisconsin – No toll roads, but potential future projects.
  6. Minnesota – Express lanes (MnPASS) on highways like I-35 and I-394.
  7. Missouri – No traditional toll roads, but the possibility of future toll projects.
  8. Kentucky – Ohio River bridges, some proposed toll roads.

Southwest & Central:

  1. Texas – Extensive toll road system, including major tollways in Dallas, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio (e.g., Texas Tollways, Sam Houston Tollway, SH 130).
  2. Oklahoma – Oklahoma Turnpike system (e.g., Will Rogers Turnpike, Kilpatrick Turnpike).
  3. Kansas – Kansas Turnpike (I-35/I-70).
  4. Colorado – E-470, Northwest Parkway, and express lanes in Denver.
  5. New Mexico – Limited toll road infrastructure but potential future projects.
  6. Arkansas – No toll roads.
  7. Louisiana – Crescent City Connection, some toll bridges.

West Coast:

  1. California – FasTrak system, including toll roads (SR 91, SR 125) and bridges in the Bay Area (e.g., Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge).
  2. Oregon – Some toll bridges, and the OReGO program (pay-per-mile).
  3. Washington – Good to Go! system, including SR 520 Bridge, Tacoma Narrows Bridge, and express lanes on I-405.

Mountain West:

  1. Nevada – Limited toll roads, but some discussion of future toll projects.
  2. Utah – Express lanes on I-15.
  3. Montana, Idaho, Wyoming – No toll roads.

Additional Notes:

– Alaska and Hawaii also do not have traditional toll roads, but may have toll bridges or tunnels.

– Toll roads are used to fund infrastructure, reduce congestion, and manage traffic in urban areas. They vary from traditional toll roads with booths to all-electronic tolling systems using transponders or license plate cameras.

Most of these states use electronic tolling systems like E-ZPass, SunPass, FasTrak, or other regional systems, making it easy for drivers to pay tolls without stopping at toll booths.

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