Why Toll Prices Are Rising in Eight States This Year [and What You Will Pay]
Drivers on some of the busiest toll roads in the country are paying more in 2026, and the increases are not stopping. At least eight states, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, California, Virginia, Ohio, Texas and Colorado, have confirmed toll rate hikes this year, with more agencies expected to file rate cases before the end of 2026.
For commuters who cross a tolled bridge or turnpike every workday, the individual increases look small on paper: a few cents here, a percentage point there. Multiplied across a daily commute and a full year, the totals add up to real money, and the pattern shows no sign of reversing.
Pennsylvania and New Jersey Lead the Way
A 4 percent toll hike took effect on the Pennsylvania Turnpike on January 4, 2026. The most common toll for passenger vehicles rose from $1.86 to $1.94 for E-ZPass holders, and from $3.72 to $3.88 for drivers billed by Toll By Plate. Commercial traffic felt the increase more sharply: a Class 5 tractor-trailer now pays $24.12 with E-ZPass, up from $23.16, according to CBS Philadelphia. The Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission says the added revenue goes toward debt service required under Act 44, the state law that ties turnpike tolls to statewide road maintenance funding.
New Jersey drivers absorbed a 3 percent toll increase on both the New Jersey Turnpike and the Garden State Parkway starting January 1, 2026, the second consecutive year of a 3 percent hike after an identical increase in 2025. The New Jersey Turnpike Authority projects the change will add 1.8 percent to Turnpike toll revenue and 3 percent to Parkway revenue for the year.
Crossing the Delaware River got more expensive too. Tolls on the eight bridges operated by the Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission, including the Scudder Falls, New Hope-Lambertville and Delaware Water Gap crossings, rose on January 1, 2026. The E-ZPass rate for passenger vehicles increased by 50 cents, from $1.50 to $2, while Toll-By-Plate drivers now pay $5, up from $3. Commercial vehicles pay $6.50 per axle with E-ZPass and $8 per axle without it. Not every Delaware River crossing went up: the Delaware River Port Authority skipped a planned increase on the Benjamin Franklin, Walt Whitman, Commodore Barry and Betsy Ross bridges, holding those tolls at $6.
New York, California and the West
New York drivers are seeing the steepest jump on this list. All toll rates at facilities operated by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority rose 7.5 percent in 2026, covering the bridges and tunnels that funnel traffic into Manhattan from every surrounding borough and New Jersey.
California took a slower, longer-term approach. Tolls on the state’s bridges for standard two-axle cars and trucks began rising by 50 cents per year for five straight years, with the first increase landing on January 1, 2026. Drivers who cross the same span daily will feel each annual bump compound on the last, reaching a cumulative $2.50 increase by 2030.
The Ohio Turnpike raised rates by 2.7 percent, and Colorado’s express toll lanes went up roughly 3 percent. In Virginia, the Downtown and Midtown tunnels connecting Norfolk and Portsmouth adjusted rates by varying percentages depending on the time of day, vehicle class and payment method, part of a variable pricing structure meant to manage congestion in the morning and evening rush.
Why Tolls Keep Climbing
Every one of these increases traces back to the same basic pressure: aging infrastructure that costs more to maintain every year, combined with construction and material costs that have climbed sharply from 2020 onward. Toll authorities are largely self-funded, meaning they cannot draw on general state tax revenue the way a state department of transportation can. When bond payments come due or a bridge needs major structural work, the toll rate is often the only lever available.
Pennsylvania’s Act 44 is a clear example. The law requires the turnpike to funnel a fixed annual payment toward the state’s broader transportation budget, a formula that has pushed the turnpike to raise tolls annually for more than a decade. New Jersey’s Turnpike Authority has followed a similar multi-year plan tied to a capital program that funds widening projects and bridge replacements across the network.
What Drivers Can Do to Cut the Cost
Every increase listed above charges Toll-By-Plate drivers, meaning those without a transponder, a noticeably higher rate than E-ZPass holders. On the PA Turnpike, that gap now runs almost double: $3.88 versus $1.94 for the most common passenger toll. Getting a transponder, whether E-ZPass, FasTrak in California, or another regional equivalent, is the single easiest way to avoid paying the premium rate charged to plate-billed drivers.
Frequent commuters should also check whether their toll authority offers a discount plan for high-volume users. Several E-ZPass states, including New Jersey and Pennsylvania, offer reduced commuter rates for drivers who cross the same toll point a set number of times per month, though drivers typically need to enroll directly through the toll authority rather than assuming the discount applies automatically.
Route planning changes the math too. Mapping apps like Waze and Google Maps allow drivers to select a toll-avoidance setting, which can be worth testing on regular commutes even if it adds a few minutes of drive time. The setting pays off most on routes that cross multiple toll points in a single trip.
What a Daily Commute Actually Costs
The per-trip numbers look manageable in isolation, but a daily commuter feels the full effect differently. A Pennsylvania Turnpike driver making a round trip five days a week with E-ZPass now pays about $20.20 a week just in the increase-adjusted toll, up from $19.35 before January, a difference of roughly $44 over a 52-week year. A New York commuter crossing an MTA bridge or tunnel twice a day absorbs the full 7.5 percent jump on every single crossing, which on a $6 base toll adds up to an extra $117 a year before accounting for any other toll points along the same commute.
Delaware River commuters face the sharpest single jump on this list in dollar terms. The E-ZPass rate rising from $1.50 to $2 is a 33 percent increase, and for a driver who crosses one of the eight affected bridges twice daily for work, that alone adds roughly $260 a year compared with the prior rate. Drivers who still pay by Toll-By-Plate rather than E-ZPass see an even steeper jump. That rate rose from $3 to $5 on the same bridges, a 67 percent increase in a single year.
What Comes Next
California’s five-year, 50-cent-a-year toll plan means Bay Area and Southern California bridge crossings will see another automatic increase every January through 2030, without a new public vote required. New Jersey’s toll authority typically finalizes the following year’s rate in its fall budget cycle, so drivers in that state should expect the next adjustment to be confirmed before the end of 2026.
Drivers who want to track a specific toll authority’s rate schedule can usually find the current and projected fee tables published directly on the agency’s website, which is the most reliable way to confirm a toll increase before it appears as a surprise on a monthly statement.
For now, the trend across nearly every major toll authority points in one direction. Bond payments, construction contracts and maintenance backlogs are pushing rates up in small, steady increments rather than one large jump, a pattern toll agencies describe as more predictable for budgeting but one that still adds up for the millions of drivers who cross these roads every week, week after week, year after year.
Sources:
- CBS Philadelphia: Tolls are going up for Pennsylvania and New Jersey drivers in 2026
- SlashGear: These States Are Quietly Raising Toll Prices In 2026
- PrePass: Toll rate updates: What’s changing in 2026
- Metropolitan Transportation Commission: 2026 Toll Increase & HOV Policy Updates