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基礎知識

NZ 的 RUC 制度如何運作

紐西蘭道路使用者收費制度的完整概述。

8 min read更新時間 February 2026
The short version

Road User Charges (RUC) is how NZ makes sure everyone chips in for the roads, even if your vehicle doesn't pay tax at the petrol pump. You buy distance in 1,000km blocks, stick a label on your windscreen, and away you go. Simple as.

Why does RUC exist?

Here's the deal: New Zealand funds its roads through a "user pays" system. If you drive on the roads, you help pay for them. Fair enough.

For most Kiwis driving petrol cars, this happens automatically. Every time you fill up, there's a chunk of Fuel Excise Duty baked into the price. You pay, the money goes to roads, everyone's happy.

But what about vehicles that don't use taxed fuel? Diesel doesn't have excise at the pump. Electric cars don't use any fuel at all. That's where Road User Charges come in. RUC makes sure these vehicles still pay their share, based on how far they actually drive.

Who pays what?

No RUC

Petrol cars

Pay at the pump via Fuel Excise Duty

Pays RUC

Diesel vehicles

Diesel isn't taxed at the pump

Pays RUC

Electric vehicles

Don't use any fuel at all

Pays RUC

Heavy vehicles (3.5t+)

Always pay RUC, regardless of fuel type

The logic is simple

Petrol vehicles pay per litre at the pump. RUC vehicles pay per kilometre through licences. Both end up contributing to the same pot of money.

Where does your money go?

Every dollar from RUC is legally ring-fenced for transport. It can't disappear into other government pockets.

Fuel Excise Duty

Petrol vehicles

Road User Charges

Diesel, EVs, heavy

Vehicle Licensing

All vehicles (rego)

National Land

Transport Fund

Managed by Waka Kotahi

🛣️

Road maintenance

🚌

Public transport

🚧

Safety upgrades

🚴

Cycling & walking

How it actually works

01

Check if you need RUC

If your vehicle runs on diesel, electricity, or weighs over 3.5 tonnes, you're in the RUC club. Petrol cars? You're already sorted at the pump.

02

Buy your distance

RUC comes in 1,000km blocks. Heading on a road trip? Buy more. Barely drive? Buy less. You can get them online or at the AA, Post Shop, VINZ, or VTNZ.

03

Stick your label on

Pop that RUC label on the inside of your passenger-side windscreen. It needs to be visible from outside, and yes, they do check.

04

Top up before you run out

Your label shows a maximum distance. Go past it without a new licence and you're driving illegally. Keep an eye on that odometer.

Current rates (per 1,000km)

Plus admin fee of $12.44 online or $13.71 in person

Light EV / Diesel

3,500kg or less

$76

Plug-in Hybrid (Petrol)

Reduced rate (also pays FED)

$38

Heavy Vehicles

Over 3,500kg

Varies by weight

Light vs Heavy: Two different worlds

The RUC system treats light vehicles (3,500kg or less) and heavy vehicles (over 3,500kg) quite differently.

Light vehicles have it easy. Your factory odometer is your distance recorder. The rate is flat. Done.

Heavy vehicles are a different story. They need special hubodometers fitted to their axles, rates vary wildly based on weight and axle configuration, and there's a bunch more paperwork involved. Why? Because a fully loaded truck causes exponentially more road damage than your Ranger. The costs need to match.

The fourth power law

Road damage doesn't increase evenly with weight. Double the axle load and you get roughly 16 times the wear. That's why heavy vehicle rates can be dramatically higher.

Key dates

1977

Modern RUC system begins

2012

Current Act comes into force

2024

EVs start paying RUC

2027

Heavy EVs join with weight-based rates + digital system launches

What's changing?

The biggest shake-up since 1977 is coming. By TBC (expected 2028), even petrol cars will move to RUC, and the whole system is going digital. No more paper labels. No more guessing if you're compliant.

Going away

  • • Paper windscreen labels
  • • Manual distance tracking
  • • NZTA as the only RUC seller

Coming in

  • • Digital compliance checking
  • • Multiple RUC providers
  • • Pay-as-you-go options

Quick questions

Want to dig deeper?

This was the overview. We've got separate guides covering who exactly pays RUC, how rates are calculated, and the nitty-gritty of buying licences. Check them out in the Basics section.

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