Italy Motorway Tolls 2026: The A1 From Milan to Naples Costs €54 Total, the Telepass Saves You 15 Minutes at Every Booth, and There Are Specific Free Routes the GPS Never Suggests

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026.

Italian motorway tolls (i pedaggi autostradali — the specific Italian infrastructure financing system where the private motorway operators (the Autostrade per l'Italia group (ASPI), the Società Autostrade Meridionali, the Autostrada Brescia-Padova, and the 20+ other Italian motorway concessionaires) collect the toll (the pedaggio) from the vehicle (the car, the truck, the motorcycle) at the toll plazas (i caselli autostradali) in exchange for the maintained motorway use): the Italian motorway toll system is the most extensively developed in Europe by total toll-collecting route km (the Italian motorway network has approximately 6,000km of toll-paying motorway versus the French 11,600km and the Spanish 3,200km) and the one whose specific rate variation (between the approximately €0.05/km on the least expensive Italian motorways and the approximately €0.14/km on the most expensive (the specific Alpine tunnels (the Mont Blanc tunnel (€52 each way) and the Grand Saint Bernard tunnel (€35 each way)) produce the highest single Italian road toll rates)) requires the most specific planning for the long-distance driver.

Italian Tolls: Key Route Costs and Payment Methods

Primary Route Costs (2026)

The specific Italian motorway toll costs for the primary tourist routes (the 2026 approximate values — check autostrade.it for the specific current toll calculator): the A1 (the Autostrada del Sole — Rome to Milan): the full Rome-Milan A1 toll approximately €35-40 (the specific variable (the vehicle class — the Class 1 (the standard car) rate) and the specific direction (the toll is generally the same in both directions on the Italian motorway); the Rome-Naples (the A1 to Capua junction, then the A2/A3 to Naples): approximately €11-13; the Milan-Venice (the A4 motorway via Bergamo, Brescia, Verona, Vicenza, and Padova): approximately €18-20; the Turin-Milan (the A4 west): approximately €8-10; the A24 Rome-L'Aquila: approximately €8-10; and the A22 (the Brenner Autostrada — the Verona to Brenner Pass (Austrian border)): approximately €20-22 Verona-Brenner (the most specifically expensive Italian A-class motorway at approximately €0.12-0.14/km for the Alpine terrain). The A57/A4 Venice ring (the Venice area motorway) and the A22 Modena-Brenner (the E45 supersede the A22 in some sections with different toll structures).

Telepass and Payment Options

Telepass (the electronic toll transponder — the RFID device mounted on the windscreen that automatically pays the toll at the designated Telepass lane (the "T" lane (the green T sign) that the Telepass user enters without stopping (the electronic payment processed at the 130km/h approach speed in the specific high-speed "Free Flow" Telepass lanes (not universal in 2026 but expanding)) or at the reduced-speed Telepass manual lanes (the standard Telepass lane where the vehicle stops briefly and the payment is confirmed on the Telepass device)): the Telepass Italy rental (the Telepass is available as a rental product for the short-term visitor (the Telepass Move — the specific tourist product (the rented Telepass device for 1-30 days at approximately €3-4/day plus the toll costs) that the Autostrade per l'Italia and the Telepass company offer for the foreign visitor who does not have a permanent Italian Telepass subscription)): the specific Telepass advantage for the tourist (the time saving at the toll booth (approximately 30-60 seconds per booth versus the cash payment or the credit card payment) and the specific access to the Telepass lanes (which are typically shorter than the cash and card payment lanes in peak travel periods)). Viacard (the prepaid card (the Viacard magnetic card loaded with a specific credit balance, available at autogrill (the motorway service stations) and at some banks)): the alternative payment without the transponder device; less efficient than Telepass but functional for the occasional Italian motorway user. Credit card (the standard credit and debit card payment at the manual toll booth — the most universally applicable Italian toll payment method for the visitor without Telepass or Viacard): all Italian toll booths accept the major international credit and debit cards (Visa, Mastercard, and the contactless NFC payment).

Q&A: Italian Motorway Tolls

Are there toll-free motorway alternatives in Italy?

Yes — the specific toll-free Italian national road alternatives: the Via Emilia (the SS9 — the Roman Via Aemilia from Rimini to Piacenza, the parallel to the A1 through Emilia-Romagna): the SS9 passes through the specific Emilia city centres (Rimini, Forlì, Faenza, Imola, Bologna, Modena, Reggio Emilia, Parma, and Piacenza) and is significantly slower (the estimated 4-5 hours versus the 2.5 hours of the A1 for the Bologna-Piacenza section) but free and specifically scenic. The Via Aurelia (the SS1 — the Roman Via Aurelia from Rome to Genova along the Tyrrhenian coast): the most specifically scenic Italian toll-free road alternative, the 450km coastal road from Rome to Genova via the Lazio and Tuscany Tyrrhenian coast (passing through Tarquinia, Orbetello, Grosseto, Livorno, and the Cinque Terre access roads): significantly slower (approximately 7-8 hours versus 4 hours of the A12/A7 motorway) but the specific Tuscan Maremma and Ligurian coast views justify the time investment for the visitor who is not constrained by schedule. The Google Maps/Waze "toll-free" option: both navigation apps include the specific "avoid tolls" route option that automatically recalculates the route to use the free national roads — the useful tool for the specific section where the toll cost exceeds the time value of the motorway.

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