near
Rochester, New Hampshire using a coin drop basket (left) and a conventional toll booth (right). This plaza was demolished with the conversion of the turnpike to all-electronic tolling. Interchange on the
Pennsylvania Turnpike, prior to the turnpike's conversion to all-electronic tolling. 's toll booths were replaced in 2016 with fare collection gantries such as this one in
Newton, and license plates of vehicles lacking E-ZPass transponders are photographed and the owners billed.
Creation The first E-ZPass system was implemented on December 17, 1996, at all toll collection facilities of Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority, including 7 bridges and 2 tunnels. The earliest test of what was then known as the Automatic Vehicle Identification (AVI) was conducted by the
Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority and the
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. They tested AVI tags on
Staten Island and utilized a paper voucher as a control which proved to be far less accurate than the tags. As a result of the test, the two agencies agreed to convene a larger group of the region's toll authorities. Their initial idea was to develop independent systems that did not interfere with each other. TBTA suggested that there be a regionally cooperative system using a single tag, later forming the basis for regional cooperation. The tolling agencies of
New York,
New Jersey, and
Pennsylvania, which constitute two-thirds of the United States' $3-billion-a-year toll industry, met at an
International Bridge, Tunnel and Toll Association (IBTTA) meeting to create a compatible electronic-tolling technology that could be used on the toll roads and bridges of the three states, in an effort to reduce congestion on some of the busiest roadways and toll plazas in the US. In 1991, the Interagency Committee was created to develop, and involved the participation and cooperation of seven independent toll agencies: the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the
New Jersey Turnpike Authority, the New Jersey Highway Authority (which, at the time, operated the
Garden State Parkway), the
Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority), the
New York State Thruway Authority, the
Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, and the
South Jersey Transportation Authority (operator of the
Atlantic City Expressway). The E-ZPass trademark, however, belongs to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. The Port Authority has been aggressive at protecting its trademark, including forcing the
Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority to rename the "EZ Pass" regional transit pass to "EZ transit pass" to protect its rights. The seven agencies started making plans to test two possible technologies for E-ZPass in 1992. The technologies would be installed along the
Garden State Parkway and
New York State Thruway. E-ZPass was first deployed on the Thruway at the Spring Valley toll plaza on August 3, 1993. Over the following three and a half years, the New York State Thruway Authority (NYSTA) installed electronic toll-collection equipment, in stages, along the Thruway. By December 1996, it was implemented at all of the Thruway's fixed-toll barriers, and by March 1998, E-ZPass was installed at all of the Thruway's mainline exits. The Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority, which maintains all toll bridges and tunnels that begin and end in
New York City, is the largest tolling agency by revenue in the United States ($1.9 billion in 2017). It began its E-ZPass implementation in 1995 and completed it at all nine of its toll facilities by January 1997. E-ZPass was popular among motorists who frequently used TBTA crossings, and by August 1996, nearly 2,000 motorists per day were signing up for E-ZPass. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates all bridges and tunnels between New York City and New Jersey, implemented E-ZPass at the
George Washington Bridge in July 1997, and at the
Holland Tunnel and
Lincoln Tunnel in October 1997. The
Pennsylvania Turnpike planned to adopt E-ZPass by 1998; however, implementation of the system was postponed until December 2, 2000, when E-ZPass debuted on the turnpike between Harrisburg West and the Delaware River Bridge. By December 15, 2001, E-ZPass could be used on the entire length of the mainline Pennsylvania Turnpike. Commercial vehicles were allowed to use the system beginning on December 14, 2002, and the entire Turnpike system was taking E-ZPass by 2006. On October 6, 1998, a
U.S. patent for an automated toll collection system was issued to Fred Slavin and Randy J. Schafer.
Expansion Meanwhile, various other agencies began work on similar electronic toll collecting facilities. This resulted in the emergence of other networks: • The MassPass system used in
Massachusetts, changed to the compatible
Fast Lane in 1998 and rebranded E-ZPass in 2012 • The
I-Pass system used in
Illinois • The
I-Zoom system used in
Indiana, rebranded E-ZPass in 2012 • The
Smart Tag system used in
Virginia, merged with E-ZPass in 2004 • The TransPass system used in
Maine, since replaced by the E-ZPass system • The
M-Tag system used in
Maryland, integrated into and rebranded E-ZPass in 2001 • The Quick Pass system used in
North Carolina, partially integrated in 2013 into the E-ZPass system. • The
E-Pass system in Florida, partially integrated in 2018 • The
PeachPass system used in Georgia, partially integrated with E-ZPass in November 2023. Originally, these systems were not interchangeable with E-ZPass. However, since most of them use the same technology (or have since converted over to a compatible technology), all of them have been incorporated into the E-ZPass network. Though several still retain their own brand name for their own facilities, users of those systems can use E-ZPass and vice versa. As a result, all E-ZPass holders can use their transponders in any of the states that offer it. The E-ZPass system continues to expand. The Indiana Toll Road Concession Company upgraded its toll plazas to include E-ZPass functionality on the
Indiana Toll Road, while the Ohio Turnpike Commission upgraded its toll plazas in October 2009 for the
Ohio Turnpike (I-76, I-80, I-90). On December 16, 2008,
Rhode Island joined the network by activating E-ZPass lanes in the state's only toll booth, at the
Claiborne Pell Newport Bridge. The
Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, which had a
toll road system predating the E-ZPass system which was ended in 2006, announced at the end of July 2015 its entrance into the E-ZPass system as part of the financing for the
Louisville-area
Ohio River Bridges Project involving the new
Abraham Lincoln (paired with the retrofitted
Kennedy) and
Lewis and Clark bridges. On November 9, 2017, the
Central Florida Expressway Authority (CFX) announced that it was joining the E-ZPass group. CFX began accepting E-ZPass along its toll roads on September 1, 2018. On May 28, 2021, the Florida Turnpike Enterprise announced that its
SunPass facilities would begin accepting E-ZPass. In addition, E-ZPass facilities began accepting SunPass Pro transponders (but not earlier SunPass transponders).
Canada E-ZPass is generally not accepted in
Canada but several exceptions exist. Until 2005, drivers crossing the
Peace Bridge between
Fort Erie, Ontario, and
Buffalo, New York, paid a toll before crossing to Canada. Following upgrades to the border crossings in 2005, drivers instead pay a toll on the Canadian side of the Peace Bridge after clearing Canadian customs. This is the first E-ZPass toll gantry outside of the United States. The toll goes to the
Buffalo and Fort Erie Public Bridge Authority, a bi-national agency responsible for maintaining the international bridge. On August 11, 2014, E-ZPass began to be accepted at the
Lewiston–Queenston Bridge,
Rainbow Bridge, and
Whirlpool Rapids Bridge. The toll for the Lewiston–Queenston Bridge is paid in Canada after clearing Canadian customs, whereas the toll is paid before leaving the United States at the other two bridges. The toll from these three bridges goes to the
Niagara Falls Bridge Commission. On June 27, 2019, E-ZPass began to be accepted at the
Thousand Islands Bridge on both the US side and Canada side. While these facilities take both U.S. and Canadian cash, E-ZPass is only billable in U.S. dollars.
Out-of-network systems E-ZPass ETC transponders do not work on all toll roads in the United States. Currently, the E-ZPass electronic toll-collection system (as well as the other ETC systems that are part of the E-ZPass network) are not compatible with California's
FasTrak, Kansas's
K-TAG, Oklahoma's
Pikepass, Texas's
TxTag, Utah's Express Pass, Puerto Rico's
AutoExpreso, and Cruise Card, or other ETC systems outside of E-ZPass operating regions. Under
MAP-21, passed in 2012, all ETC facilities in the United States were supposed to have some form of interoperability by October 1, 2016; however, no funding was provided for this effort, nor were penalties established for failure to meet this deadline, and this has yet to be accomplished. In 2009, the Alliance for Toll Interoperability stated that it was exploring the option of using
high-speed cameras to take photographs of the cars passing through non-E-ZPass lanes in other states. The
Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, which had been studying going towards
all-electronic tolling in order to cut costs, implemented such a system for non-E-ZPass users in 2020 due to the on-going
COVID-19 pandemic. ==Variants==