RUC Timeline

Key policy developments and legislation shaping Road User Charges in New Zealand, from 2008 to the present.

RUC History at a Glance

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1977

RUC system introduced

2008

Independent review of RUC system

2009

EVs exempted from RUC

2010

First eRUC devices available

2012

Legislative reform, including for eRUC

2023

Commitment to RUC for all vehicles

2024

Electric vehicles enter RUC system

2026

RUC system modernisation

2027

Heavy EVs to RUC

TBC

Full fleet transition to RUC

Deadline

13 February 2026

RFI submissions close

What the Government wants to know

Are you ready?

Can you offer services for light vehicles by 2027?

What can you build?

What services and technology could you provide?

What do you need?

What barriers exist? How can government help?

Open to all: The Ministry encourages responses from outside the transport sector too -including electricity and telecommunications providers.

No more

Physical labels

3.5M+

New users affected

Multiple

RUC providers

Flexible

Payment options

Before
  • Must display physical RUC label
  • Only NZTA-approved electronic providers
  • Pre-pay required for most vehicles
  • Electronic distance recorders for flexible payment
After
  • Digital licences only -no windscreen label
  • Open market for ‘RUC Providers’
  • Post-pay, subscriptions, estimated billing
  • Flexible options for all vehicles

New RUC Provider Framework

Third party

applies

NZTA reviews

& approves

Provider issues

RUC licences

Users choose

their provider

Important: This Bill prepares the system for light vehicles. It doesn’t set dates for when petrol vehicles will transition.
Building Nations 2025

6 August 2025 - Transport Minister announces roadmap for transitioning light petrol vehicles to RUC

What’s happening

Amending the Road User Charges Act 2012
Updating regulations to enable private sector innovation
Market engagement to support new service development
Bill being drafted for Select Committee review

Previous end date

31 Dec 2025

New end date

1 July 2027

Heavy EVs: Vehicles over 3.5 tonnes like electric trucks and buses. Exempt from RUC since 2017 to encourage zero-emission heavy transport.

Why the extension?

Gives heavy EV owners more time to plan for entering the RUC system, while confirming all vehicles must eventually contribute to road maintenance costs.

25

Formal responses

3

Additional meetings

28

Total parties engaged

Proposed solutions

In-vehicle telematics

GPS-based distance tracking

Mobile apps

Manual entry & odometer photos

Point-of-sale

Systems at fuel stations

Bundled services

RUC with other vehicle services

Key feedback themes

Remove physical label display requirement
Concerns about NZTA as both retailer and regulator
Interest in direct customer fees vs NZTA commissions

Some respondents

AA New ZealandEROAD LtdZ EnergyNZ PostNavmanSmartrak

Light EVs now pay RUC

From 1 April 2024

The exemption, in place since 2009, was designed to end once EVs reached ~2% of the light vehicle fleet. That milestone has been achieved.

Full EVs

$76

per 1,000km

Plug-in Hybrids

$38

per 1,000km

Transition period: A two-month grace period allowed EV owners to register without penalties for unpaid charges.

36%

reduction

Standard

rates resume

The temporary reduction had been part of cost-of-living measures during high inflation. From 1 July 2023, RUC rates returned to their standard levels.

‘Driving Change’ Discussion Document

Reviewing the Road User Charges System

Proposed new factors for setting RUC rates

🌿

Emissions

🔊

Noise

🚗

Congestion

Also proposed bringing light EVs into RUC and improving compliance measures. Consultation closed April 2022.

36%

RUC reduction

21 Apr - 21 Jul

2022

Part of a broader cost-of-living package alongside fuel excise duty cuts, providing relief for both diesel and petrol vehicle owners.

Light EV exemption extended

New end date: 31 March 2024

Gave the EV market additional time to mature before owners would need to contribute to road funding. The exemption had been periodically renewed since 2009.

Allen & Clarke conducted three comprehensive evaluations assessing how well the reformed RUC system achieved its objectives.

2013Evaluation
  • System simplified successfully
  • Reduced evasion opportunities
  • Improved fairness perception
  • Some light diesel owners exceeded limits
2014Evaluation
  • Operators satisfied with new system
  • eRUC and HPMV permits showing efficiency gains
  • Weight-based evasion significantly decreased
2016Evaluation
  • Act effective as legislative framework
  • eRUC growing share of revenue
  • eRUC costs barrier for small operators
  • Light diesel owners still showed poor understanding

Road User Charges Act 2012

Major modernisation of NZ’s RUC framework

Key changes introduced

Vehicle classification

Heavy (>3,500kg) vs Light (≤3,500kg)

Electronic framework

Approved providers for distance recorders

Fixed RUC weights

Based on gross vehicle mass, no more operator-nominated weights

Restructured penalties

Distinct categories with specific fines

Appeal process

Clear pathway through District, High, and Supreme Courts

Simplified exemptions

Streamlined process for vehicles unsuitable for roads

Context: New Zealand’s RUC system had been operating since 1978. This review examined whether it remained fair and efficient.

Alternative mechanisms examined

Simplified RUC system
Diesel excise + heavy vehicle RUC
Diesel excise + differentiated rego fees
Fully electronic RUC system

Also analysed

  • Engineering & economic principles of road cost allocation
  • Vehicle impacts on road wear
  • International road charging technologies
  • Ministry of Transport’s Cost Allocation Model