Te whakakotahi i te whakahaere RUC ki ngā mahi waka maha.
Running a fleet? You've got three options: manage RUC manually (painful), use an eRUC provider (automated), or get Direct Connect (print your own labels). The legal responsibility stays with you, but the admin can be delegated. No bulk discounts though. Every km costs the same whether you've got one vehicle or a thousand.
Pick the one that matches your scale and how much admin pain you can tolerate.
Unlike many business expenses, RUC doesn't get cheaper at scale. Every 1,000km costs the same whether you're buying for one vehicle or five hundred. The rates are set by government and apply equally to everyone. What you save with automation is time and compliance risk, not money on the RUC itself.
Using an eRUC provider doesn't mean you're off the hook. Some things can never be handed off.
Even if your provider's system fails to buy a licence in time, you are still liable for the overrun. The legal obligation always sits with the vehicle operator.
Four businesses are currently approved by NZTA to provide electronic RUC services. They handle distance recording, automatic purchasing, and off-road tracking.
Fleet management platform with RUC, fuel tax credits, and driver safety tools.
RUC Manager solution with automated compliance and distance tracking.
Heavy vehicle tracking and automated RUC management.
Electronic distance recording and RUC compliance services.
These providers operate under the eRUC Code of Practice and must meet strict security and accuracy requirements.
NZTA can audit your fleet at any time. Missing records can mean fines up to $100,000 for organisations. Even if your provider stores data, you need access to it.
Logbooks
1 year
VDAM permits
1 year post-expiry
Maintenance records
2 years
Fuel invoices
6 years
Cartage invoices
6 years
Want to connect your fleet software to RUC systems? Here's what's actually available today.
NZTA doesn't certify "fleet management software" as a category. They only certify the eRUC component. If your FMS provider says they're "RUC integrated," they're probably using one of the four approved ESPs under the hood.
The 2027 transition will change a lot. Here's what's been signalled:
No more physical labels
Digital records replace windscreen stickers
Flexible payment options
Post-pay, monthly billing, subscriptions
In-built vehicle telematics
Use OEM data instead of aftermarket hardware
Competitive provider market
More options beyond the current four ESPs
Bundled services
RUC + tolls + insurance in one bill
Location-based pricing
Foundation for congestion charging
These aspects haven't been confirmed in official documentation yet:
Until the 2027 changes kick in, you're working with a hardware-dependent, pre-paid system. Automation through eRUC reduces your admin burden but doesn't reduce your legal responsibility. Get your record-keeping sorted, pick a reliable provider, and keep an eye on the transition. The future looks more flexible, but the current rules still apply.