Video tolling
Video tolling is a form of electronic toll collection that uses video or still images of a vehicle's license plate to identify a vehicle liable to pay a road toll. The system dispenses with collection of road tolls using road-side cash or payment card methods, and may be used in conjunction with "all electronic" open road tolling, to permit drivers without an RFID device to use the toll road.
Technology
In a video tolling system the license plate number can be extracted from an image either by using automatic number plate recognition technology or manual data-entry clerks.Video tolling is sometimes used in conjunction with "all electronic" open road tolling, to allow drivers without an RFID device to use the toll road. An all electronic system is a toll collection point that does not permit cash payment, and vehicle identification / toll collection is done using RFID or other electronic means. When video tolling is used in conjunction with all electronic systems, a fee is frequently added to the toll to offset the higher cost of processing video tolls.
There are two forms of video billing: "registered" and "unregistered" accounts. In registered video billing, the motorist first registers the vehicle's plates with the tolling agency prior to using the toll road. The toll system will then associate the plate images with the account and debit the amount of the toll from the account.
Unregistered systems look up the vehicle registration information from a government motor vehicle registration database and send a bill to the address in the database. There may be an extra charge for the additional processing.
North America
The first video tolling system in North America was the Highway 407 in the Greater Toronto Area. The 407 ETR system, which opened in 1997, has struggled somewhat with accuracy and customer service issues, and on 2003, settled a lawsuit related to potential incorrect charges on the system. Video Tolling systems are also being evaluated in the United States, and in 2006, the Texas Department of Transportation deployed the first "Video Only" system on SH 121 north of Dallas, but not without some controversy with Cintra attempting to gain control and construction of the SH 121 Tollway; maintenance of the SH 121 Tollway was transferred to the North Texas Tollway Authority in 2008 and was redesignated as the Sam Rayburn Tollway.California
Video tolling is used as a secondary enforcement measure for vehicles not equipped with a FasTrak RFID transponder on the toll roads, toll bridges, and high-occupancy toll lanes throughout California. When a vehicle does not have a transponder, or if a transponder is not detected at enforcement points, a violation enforcement system triggers a camera system that captures photos of the vehicle and its license plate for processing.Pennsylvania
In 2020, the Pennsylvania Turnpike began a transition to an all-electronic toll collection throughout the turnpike system.Europe
Austria
In Austria works system called ASFINAG, the Austrian financing provider for and operator of motorways and expressways uses a video tolling system called Videomaut. It covers parts of three motorways which are subject to special tolls in addition to the regular tolls paid through a road-tax disc for vehicles with a total weight of no more than 3.5 metric tonnes.Availability
Videomaut is available on the following routes:- A9 Pyhrn Motorway, between Spital/Pyhrn and Ardning and between St. Michael and Übelbach, toll plaza of Bosruck
- A10 Tauern Motorway, between Flachau and Rennweg, toll plaza of St. Michael i.L.
- A13 Brenner Motorway, between Brenner Pass and Schönberg, toll plaza of Schönberg
Use and limitations
Fees and discounts
Videomaut tickets can be bought for a single or multiple passages or an unlimited number of passages for one year from the date the ticket is issued. Discounts are available to:- drivers holding road-tax discs that are valid for one year,
- commuters,
- military and alternative civilian service members, and
- drivers with disabilities.
Poland