न्यूज़ीलैंड बाज़ार में इलेक्ट्रॉनिक RUC प्रदाताओं की तुलना।
eRUC systems automate the whole RUC process. GPS tracks your distance, buys licences automatically, and handles off-road credits. Right now it's mainly for heavy fleets (EROAD, Teletrac Navman), but big changes are coming. By 2027, expect app-based options for everyone.
Electronic RUC (eRUC) replaces the manual process of checking your odometer, buying distance blocks, and sticking labels on your windscreen. Instead, a GPS-enabled device tracks everything automatically.
Think of it as "set and forget" RUC compliance. The system knows where you've driven, buys licences before you run out, and even calculates off-road refunds for you.
The traditional way
The automated way
The system runs in the background. You drive, it handles the rest.
A GPS-enabled device (like EROAD's Ehubo) gets fitted to your vehicle. It tracks location and distance continuously.
The device sends your distance data to the provider's system in real-time. No manual readings needed.
When your licence is running low, the system automatically purchases more distance. You're always compliant.
GPS knows when you're on private land. Those kilometres get flagged for automatic refund claims.
The hardware requirement is changing
Under the current 2012 Act, eRUC providers must supply their own approved hardware. The 2025 Bill removes this requirement, opening the door for smartphone apps and car manufacturer systems.
Right now, the eRUC market is dominated by a few heavy-vehicle specialists. They're approved under Section 43 of the Road User Charges Act 2012.
NZ's #1 eRUC solution
The market leader. First to implement nationwide GPS-based road charging. Their Ehubo device is the industry standard for heavy transport.
Strengths
Best for
Large transport fleets, logistics companies
Global telematics giant
A multinational provider with NZTA approval. eRUC is part of their broader fleet tracking and management suite.
Strengths
Best for
Multi-national operations, enterprise fleets
Heavy transport specialist
Strong in the heavy transport telematics space. Offers similar eRUC functionality with focus on commercial operators.
Strengths
Best for
Heavy transport operators, construction fleets
If you're running trucks over 3.5 tonnes, eRUC is basically essential. The compliance savings alone justify it.
Managing RUC across dozens of vehicles manually? Nightmare. eRUC centralises everything into one dashboard.
Farms, forestry, construction sites. If a chunk of your driving is off public roads, automated refund tracking pays for itself.
The current eRUC systems are overkill (and expensive) for a single diesel ute or EV. That's changing though.
If you're just doing the school run and supermarket trips, manual RUC is fine for now.
The upfront cost of hardware and subscriptions needs to pay for itself. For commercial operators, it usually does.
No more forgetting to top up. The system handles it before you run out.
Off-road kilometres get tracked and credited. No paperwork, no waiting.
Monthly billing instead of lump sum pre-payments. Easier on the books.
No manual readings, no trips to the agent, no label printing. Just drive.
The Land Transport (Revenue) Amendment Bill 2025 is reshaping the entire eRUC landscape. The old "Electronic System Provider" model is being replaced with a broader "RUC Provider" framework.
The market is about to get a lot more interesting. Here's what to expect once the Bill passes.
How do the different options stack up?
NZTA Online
Target
Casual users
Tech
Manual entry
Payment
Pre-pay blocks
Physical agent
Target
Cash users
Tech
Counter service
Payment
Point of sale
Legacy eRUC
Target
Heavy fleets
Tech
Hard-wired device
Payment
Auto top-up
App provider
ComingTarget
Light vehicles
Tech
Smartphone / OBD
Payment
Subscription
OEM provider
ComingTarget
New EV buyers
Tech
Built-in telematics
Payment
Bundled
| Option | Target user | Technology | Payment |
|---|---|---|---|
| NZTA Online | Casual users | Manual entry | Pre-pay blocks |
| Physical agent | Cash users | Counter service | Point of sale |
| Legacy eRUC | Heavy fleets | Hard-wired device | Auto top-up |
| App providerComing | Light vehicles | Smartphone / OBD | Subscription |
| OEM providerComing | New EV buyers | Built-in telematics | Bundled |
The 2025 Bill sets up the framework, but some critical details are being left to secondary regulations and provider agreements. These are the grey areas.
How often providers must forward revenue to the Crown. Could be daily, weekly, or monthly. Not yet defined.
Can providers charge whatever they want for 'convenience'? The Bill doesn't say. Competition is expected to regulate pricing.
If you don't pay your RUC subscription, who's on the hook? The provider or the Crown? Still being worked out.
When will physical labels stop being an option? A dual-run period is expected, but no end date set.
For the nitty-gritty of distance recording, check out Odometers and reporting. Running a fleet? The Fleet management integration guide covers how RUC fits into broader operations. And if you're curious about claiming back off-road travel, we've got a dedicated guide for that too.