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Toll road length (km) Tunnel length Toll begins Toll ends Cash tolls (car) [1] N18 Limerick-Galway Limerick Tunnel: 88 6 675m Junction 2 Junction 4 €2.00 M50 Dublin Dublin Port Tunnel: 45 5.7 4.5 km Dublin Port: M1 motorway Southbound – €12 between 6am & 10am Monday-Friday, €3.50 at all other times.
A sign informing road users of the availabilty of toll tags The eToll road sign symbol, which uses a stylised insular T eToll is an electronic toll collection system used in the Republic of Ireland. Run by the National Roads Authority , it is a interoperability system allowing cashless payment on all of Ireland's toll roads via an RFID tag ...
eFlow is the tolling brand name of Ireland's M50 motorway open road tolling operation. It is managed by Irish company Turas Mobility Services (a subsidiary of a French global organization called VINCI Concessions) on behalf of Transport Infrastructure Ireland. The tolling station is located on the M50 on the north side of the West-Link bridge.
The toll plaza is located beside the tunnel control building at the southern portal, near Dublin Port. To date, tolls have been payable either on an ad-hoc basis by cash, credit or debit card or electronically by using a tolling tag from a provider such as eFlow. Cash payments are made either to a cashier or by dropping coins only (5c ...
Payzone is an Irish consumer payment service provider company based in Dublin. The company processes electronic transactions, including debit and credit card transactions mobile phone top ups, M50 motorway toll payments, Leap travel cards, local property tax payments, pay-by-phone parking, pre-paid and bill pay utility and parcel collection services.
National Roads Network as of 2018 (note that the M17 north of the M6 is incorrectly marked as M18) In Ireland, the highest category of road is a motorway (mótarbhealach, plural: mótarbhealaí), indicated by the prefix M followed by a one- or two-digit number (the number of the national route of which each motorway forms a part).
Both are toll free. On Italian motorways, the toll applies to almost all motorways not managed by Anas. The collection of motorway tolls, from a tariff point of view, is managed mainly in two ways: either through the "closed motorway system" (km travelled) or through the "open motorway system" (flat-rate toll). [13]
It is the second-most expensive toll road in Ireland (after the Dublin Port Tunnel). A toll of €3.40 (as of 2024) for cars is charged at a toll plaza just west of Kilcock and at smaller toll plazas at on and off-ramps at Enfield. [4] Between Enfield and Kinnegad, no further access to the M4 is possible.