Wednesday 3 June 2026 17:06
Highways in Italy Now to Refund Tolls for Traffic Delays and Construction
Italian Highway Toll Refunds Begin Today for Delays and ConstructionDrivers Can Request Partial or Full Refunds on Italian Autostrade Starting 1 June, Depending on Length of Delay and Journey.Starting 1 June, Italian drivers can request refunds on highway tolls if they experience significant delays caused by roadworks or traffic blockages. The new system, approved by Italy's Transport Regulation Authority, introduces for the first time a structured compensation mechanism for poor service on the country's toll-paying highway network.
How It Works for Construction
The refund depends on the length of the journey. For routes under 30 kilometres, drivers are entitled to a refund regardless of how long the delay. For journeys between 30 and 50 kilometres, a refund applies if the delay exceeds 10 minutes. For routes longer than 50 kilometres, the minimum delay threshold rises to 15 minutes.
How It Works for Traffic
When traffic comes to a complete stop, the compensation structure is simpler. Drivers receive 50 percent of their toll for blockages lasting between one and two hours, 75 percent for blockages lasting two to three hours, and the full toll for blockages exceeding three hours.
How to Request
Drivers must submit requests through the website or app of the highway operator managing the route they travelled. The main highway companies have already published claim forms on their websites. In future, a single app will cover all operators, but for now, the system only covers journeys on highways managed by a single concessionaire. From 1 December 2026, the system will be extended to journeys across multiple operators.
Refunds are only credited for amounts exceeding one euro. The refund should appear within 20 days of the journey.
Exclusions
The system does not apply to emergency roadworks following accidents, to weather-related closures or unusual geological events, or to routine maintenance work like grass cutting or signage cleaning.
The Principle
The Transport Regulation Authority framed the initiative as honouring a simple principle: tolls should be equitable and proportionate to the service actually provided. For Italian drivers accustomed to summer delays and perpetual construction, the new system represents a long-overdue acknowledgement that paying for a service includes the right to actually receive it.
Ph: Tatiana Diuvbanova / Shutterstock.com
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Drivers Can Request Partial or Full Refunds on Italian Autostrade Starting 1 June, Depending on Length of Delay and Journey.
Starting 1 June, Italian drivers can request refunds on highway tolls if they experience significant delays caused by roadworks or traffic blockages. The new system, approved by Italy's Transport Regulation Authority, introduces for the first time a structured compensation mechanism for poor service on the country's toll-paying highway network.
The refund depends on the length of the journey. For routes under 30 kilometres, drivers are entitled to a refund regardless of how long the delay. For journeys between 30 and 50 kilometres, a refund applies if the delay exceeds 10 minutes. For routes longer than 50 kilometres, the minimum delay threshold rises to 15 minutes.
When traffic comes to a complete stop, the compensation structure is simpler. Drivers receive 50 percent of their toll for blockages lasting between one and two hours, 75 percent for blockages lasting two to three hours, and the full toll for blockages exceeding three hours.
Drivers must submit requests through the website or app of the highway operator managing the route they travelled. The main highway companies have already published claim forms on their websites. In future, a single app will cover all operators, but for now, the system only covers journeys on highways managed by a single concessionaire. From 1 December 2026, the system will be extended to journeys across multiple operators.
Refunds are only credited for amounts exceeding one euro. The refund should appear within 20 days of the journey.
The system does not apply to emergency roadworks following accidents, to weather-related closures or unusual geological events, or to routine maintenance work like grass cutting or signage cleaning.
The Transport Regulation Authority framed the initiative as honouring a simple principle: tolls should be equitable and proportionate to the service actually provided. For Italian drivers accustomed to summer delays and perpetual construction, the new system represents a long-overdue acknowledgement that paying for a service includes the right to actually receive it.
Ph: Tatiana Diuvbanova / Shutterstock.com
