El Salvador Toll Roads Complete Guide: Toll-Free Highway System 2026
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El Salvador Toll Roads Complete Guide
System: Completely toll-free national highway network
Coverage: CA-1 Panamerican, CA-2 Coastal, Northern Longitudinal, and all national roads
Currency: US Dollar (USD) - El Salvador uses USD as official currency
Technology: N/A - no toll infrastructure; future projects under study
Operator: Ministry of Public Works (MOP), FOVIAL (Road Conservation Fund)
Do I Need to Pay Tolls in El Salvador? 2026 Update
No. El Salvador maintains a completely toll-free road network as of 2026. All highways including the Panamerican Highway (CA-1), Coastal Highway (CA-2), and Northern Longitudinal Highway are accessible without any payment. El Salvador is one of the few Central American countries with no active toll collection whatsoever.
Key Reality: El Salvador uses USD as its official currency, eliminating currency exchange concerns. Road travel costs are limited entirely to fuel. The compact 21,040 km² territory means most destinations are reachable within 2-3 hours from San Salvador with no toll charges.
2026 Update: Roads remain toll-free. El Salvador secured a CABEI (Central American Bank for Economic Integration) highway funding loan in March 2026, continuing major investment in road infrastructure without introducing toll collection. The government has focused on rehabilitation, expansion (overpasses, bridges, widening) and new construction under MOP, funded through FOVIAL fuel tax revenue and international development loans.
El Salvador Road Network Overview (2026)
Major Highways - All Toll-Free (2026)
| Highway | Route | Key Connections | Toll |
|---|---|---|---|
| CA-1 (Panamerican Highway) | Guatemala border to Honduras border | San Salvador, Santa Ana, San Miguel | Free |
| CA-2 (Coastal Highway) | Guatemala border to Honduras border (Pacific coast) | Sonsonate, La Libertad, Usulután | Free |
| CA-4 (Northern Longitudinal Highway) | San Salvador northward to Honduras | Chalatenango, northern departments | Free |
| Boulevard del Ejército / Ring roads | San Salvador metropolitan area | Urban expressways, overpasses | Free |
| Los Chorros Highway (CA-1 expansion) | Colón to La Libertad (6-8 lane expansion) | Pacific coast access from capital | Free (toll under study for future) |
How Roads Are Funded in El Salvador
El Salvador funds its road network through three main channels without requiring toll collection from road users:
- FOVIAL (Road Conservation Fund): Ring-fenced fuel tax revenue dedicated exclusively to road maintenance and repair. FOVIAL carries out surface treatments, drainage construction, signalling, and routine maintenance across the national network
- Government budget allocations: Direct MOP funding for major construction projects including bridges, tunnels, overpasses, and highway widening
- International development funding: IDB (Inter-American Development Bank), MCC (Millennium Challenge Corporation), CABEI, and other institutions finance large-scale infrastructure improvements
To plan your driving costs across El Salvador, use TollGuru El Salvador route planner:
Recent Changes (2026)
- El Salvador secured new CABEI highway funding loan (March 2026) for continued road network improvements - no toll introduction announced
- Los Chorros Highway (CA-1 Colón-La Libertad) 6-8 lane expansion ongoing; previously controversial due to environmental impact but proceeding
- Government surveys indicate potential future toll implementation on Los Chorros expansion and Boulevard del Ejército at proposed rates of USD$0.50-$1.50, but no formal toll legislation has been passed as of 2026
- New bridges, overpasses, and tunnel improvements continue under MOP throughout the country
- Road condition generally good on primary highways; secondary rural roads variable quality especially in rainy season
Planning Your Journey
- All roads are free - no need to carry change or any toll payment
- El Salvador uses US dollars (USD) - no currency exchange needed for US visitors
- San Salvador to Santa Ana: approximately 1 hour on CA-1, no tolls
- San Salvador to La Libertad beach: approximately 45 minutes on CA-4/Los Chorros Highway, no tolls
- Cross-border travel: Guatemala (CA-1 west, ~2 hours) and Honduras (CA-1 east, ~2.5 hours) borders accessible on toll-free highways; border fees apply separately
- Speed limits: 90-100 km/h on national highways; 50-60 km/h urban areas
El Salvador vs. Central American Neighbours
| Country | Toll System | Typical Cost | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| El Salvador | None - completely toll-free | $0.00 | All roads |
| Guatemala | SiVAPass + cash | Q15.25 per crossing | Palín-Escuintla + new Escuintla-Quetzal |
| Honduras | Cash at booths | L 25–100 per booth | CA-5, CA-13 highways |
| Nicaragua | Cash only | NIO 2–15 per booth | Limited national highways |
| Costa Rica | QuickPass + cash/card | CRC 50–1,875 per booth | Routes 27, 1, 32 |
| Belize | None - toll-free | $0.00 | All roads |
Frequently Asked Questions
Will El Salvador introduce toll roads soon?
The government has conducted feasibility surveys for potential toll implementation on new projects like the Los Chorros Highway expansion and Boulevard del Ejército, with proposed rates of USD$0.50-$1.50. However, no formal toll legislation has been enacted as of 2026 and no implementation timeline has been announced.
What currency do I need for driving in El Salvador?
El Salvador uses the US Dollar (USD) as its official currency since 2001. No currency exchange is needed for US visitors. Since there are no tolls, your only driving cash need is for fuel.
How are El Salvador's roads maintained without tolls?
Through FOVIAL (Road Conservation Fund) funded by a dedicated fuel tax, plus government budget allocations and international development loans from institutions including IDB, MCC, and CABEI.
Useful Links & Resources
- Ministry of Public Works (MOP): mop.gob.sv
- Guatemala Toll - Northbound border toll information
- Honduras Toll - Eastbound border toll information
- Nicaragua Toll - Further Central American travel
- Costa Rica Toll - Southbound toll network
- Belize Toll - Fellow toll-free Central American country


