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Latest revision as of 11:29, 8 May 2026
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Chile Toll Roads Complete Guide
System: TAG electronic transponder (Santiago urban) + Manual cash booths (intercity)
Coverage: 770+ km nationwide — Route 5 Pan-American Highway + Santiago urban network
Currency: Chilean Peso (CLP)
Technology: TAG RFID transponders, Multi-lane free-flow (MLFF) gantries, ANPR cameras
Operators: VíasChile/Abertis, Autopista Central, Costanera Norte (Kapsch), SICE, regional concessionaires
Do I Need a TAG for Chile? 2026 Update
It depends entirely on where you are driving. Chile operates two distinct toll systems: a mandatory TAG-only network on Santiago's urban highways, and a cash-accepting manual booth system on intercity routes.
Santiago Urban Highways — TAG is mandatory. Six major highways in the Santiago metropolitan area operate exclusively via electronic TAG transponders with zero cash or card options at the gantry. Without a TAG, driving these roads triggers a day-pass fee (pase diario) of approximately CLP 4,800–9,600 per highway, charged retroactively. Tourists and rental car drivers are frequently caught by this rule.
Intercity Highways — Cash accepted. Route 5 (Pan-American Highway) and most intercity toll plazas accept Chilean pesos cash and, increasingly, credit/debit cards. TAG users pay the same toll amounts but benefit from free-flow lanes without stopping.
2026 Update: As of 1 January 2026, all toll rates and TAG gantry charges increased by 3.4% in line with Chile's December 2025 CPI (IPC) index published by the INE. This is a lower increase than 2025 (4.8%) and 2024 (4.2%). Route 78 (ex Autopista del Sol) now operates fully as free-flow gantry toll with no cash booths. The Bypass Puchuncaví opened in 2026 on Route F-20, charging CLP 500 normal / CLP 1,000 peak.
Chile Toll Costs: Current Rates 2026
Chile adjusts all concession toll rates each January 1 based on the prior year's IPC figure. The 2026 schedule reflects a 3.4% uplift across all highways.
Santiago Urban TAG Highways (2026)
All rates below are per gantry passage. Santiago highways use dynamic pricing with a higher tarifa punta (peak rate) applied on weekends, public holidays, and long weekends.
| Highway | Cars / Trucks (Normal) | Cars / Trucks (Punta) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Autopista Central (60.5 km) | CLP ~1,500–2,100/gantry | CLP ~2,500–3,200/gantry | VíasChile/Abertis, 17 gantries |
| Costanera Norte | CLP ~1,400–2,000/gantry | CLP ~2,300–3,100/gantry | Kapsch TrafficCom technology |
| Vespucio Norte Express (29 km) | CLP ~1,300–2,000/gantry | CLP ~2,100–3,000/gantry | SICE MLFF, 17 gantries |
| Vespucio Sur | CLP ~1,200–1,900/gantry | CLP ~2,000–2,800/gantry | Southern ring of Santiago |
| Autopista 68 (Santiago section) | CLP 2,700/gantry | CLP 4,000/gantry | Cars/pickups; punta rate -CLP 100 vs 2025 |
| Day Pass (pase diario) — no TAG | CLP ~4,800–9,600 | CLP ~9,600–19,200 | Per highway; billed retroactively |
Route 5 Intercity Toll Booths — Selected 2026 Rates (Cars/Pickups)
| Plaza / Route | Normal Rate (CLP) | Punta Rate (CLP) | Region |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ruta 68 — Zapata / Lo Prado | 2,700 | 4,000 | Santiago–Viña del Mar |
| Túnel El Melón (Autopista Nueva Aconcagua) | 2,900 | No punta (removed Jul 2025) | Valparaíso region |
| Pichidangui (Ruta 5 Norte) | Reduced vs 2025 | — | Coquimbo region |
| Ruta Maipo — Santiago–Talca tranche | Per plaza; ~1,800–3,500 | ~3,000–5,000 | O'Higgins / Maule |
| Ruta 5 Sur — Puerto Montt–Pargua (Trapén) | 850 (cars) / 250 (motos) | — | Los Lagos region |
| Bypass Puchuncaví (NEW 2026) — Ruta F-20 | 500 | 1,000 | Valparaíso coast (7 km) |
Example Journey Costs 2026 (Cars/Pickups, Cash or TAG)
| Route | Normal Total (CLP) | Punta Total (CLP) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Santiago → Viña del Mar (Ruta 68) | 5,400 | 8,000 | Punta -CLP 200 vs 2025 |
| Santiago → La Serena (Ruta 5 Norte) | ~12,000–14,000 | ~16,000–18,000 | Reduced vs 2025 (El Melón / Pichidangui cuts) |
| Santiago → Temuco (Ruta 5 Sur) | 24,600 | ~30,000+ | +CLP 1,200 vs 2025 |
| Santiago → Puerto Montt (~1,000 km) | ~USD 40–60 | ~USD 50–70 | Full Ruta 5 Sur; all plazas |
How to Pay Chile Tolls
You can use the following payment methods to pay tolls in Chile:
1. TAG Transponder (Santiago mandatory, intercity optional):
- TAG Santiago (main provider) — available at Autopistas Santiago service centres, online, or by home delivery (CLP 19,990 delivered)
- Telepase — alternative TAG accepted on most concessions
- Works on all Santiago gantries and most free-flow intercity gantries (Route 5 Norte/Sur, Route 78, Route 68)
- Rental car arrangements: concessionaires may register the plate directly; confirm with the rental company before driving Santiago highways
2. Cash at Manual Booths (intercity only):
- Route 5 Norte and Sur traditional plazas accept Chilean pesos
- Many intercity plazas now also accept debit/credit cards (Redcompra/Transbank)
- Exact change not required; change is given at the booth
3. Pase Sin TAG / Transit Without TAG (free-flow highways):
- For free-flow highways (Route 78, Route 68, Route 5 free-flow sections): pay online at pasastesintag.cl within the payment window (typically up to 30 days) to avoid the MOP fine
- Alternatively, each concession's own portal (e.g., rutamaipo.cl, viasur.cl) has a "paga tu pase" option
- Failure to pay results in a fine issued by the Ministerio de Obras Públicas (MOP)
To calculate toll costs for cars, trucks, motorcycles and all vehicle types across Chile's toll roads, use the TollGuru Chile toll calculator:
Recent Changes (2026)
January 2026 Rate Increase:
- All concession tolls and TAG gantry rates increased 3.4% from 1 January 2026 based on December 2025 IPC (CPI)
- This is the lowest annual IPC increase since 2021 (vs 4.8% in 2025, 4.2% in 2024, 13.3% in 2023)
- Ruta 68 punta rate reduced by CLP 100 to CLP 4,000 despite the IPC uplift
Infrastructure Changes:
- Bypass Puchuncaví opened in 2026 — 7 km on Ruta F-20, connecting to Ruta E-30-F; serves Maitencillo, Cachagua, Zapallar coastal zones
- Túnel El Melón eliminated its punta rate from July 2025; now charges a flat CLP 2,900
- Ruta 78 (ex Autopista del Sol) fully converted to free-flow gantry system since May 2024 — 8 gantries per direction; pago sin TAG via pasastesintag.cl
- Pichidangui (Ruta 5 Norte) and El Melón reductions make Santiago–La Serena cheaper in 2026 vs 2025
Chile Toll Network Overview
Santiago Urban Network (TAG-only): Six highways covering the Región Metropolitana operated under concession by VíasChile (Abertis) and other operators. All use fully electronic multi-lane free-flow gantry systems. No cash lanes exist anywhere on these roads.
Route 5 (Pan-American Highway, 1,903 km tolled): Chile's main north-south spine runs from the Peruvian border at Arica to Puerto Montt. Toll plazas are spaced approximately every 60–120 km. Northern sections (Ruta 5 Norte) and southern sections (Ruta 5 Sur) are operated by separate regional concessions. TAG is accepted but not mandatory; cash booths remain at all major plazas.
Transverse Highways: Ruta 68 (Santiago–Valparaíso/Viña), Ruta 78 (ex Autopista del Sol, now free-flow), Ruta 60 (Los Andes–Mendoza border crossing), and regional routes operate under separate concessions with their own tariff schedules.
Planning Your Journey
Cost Considerations:
- Daily Santiago urban highway costs: CLP 8,000–20,000 for typical cross-city routes (multiple gantries)
- Weekend / public holiday punta rates apply across Santiago networks and most intercity highways — plan journeys on Friday evenings or Sunday evenings carefully
- Tourists renting a car in Santiago should confirm the TAG arrangement with the rental company before leaving the lot to avoid unexpected day-pass charges
Toll-Free Alternatives:
- Surface roads in Santiago (Avenida Matta, Gran Avenida, Américo Vespucio surface) are toll-free but significantly slower during peak hours
- Google Maps "avoid tolls" routing is reliable for intercity travel on Ruta 5 but does not fully capture TAG-mandatory sections in Santiago
- Gravel/secondary roads parallel to Ruta 5 exist in some regions but add considerable time
Frequently Asked Questions
Can tourists drive on Santiago highways without a TAG?
Technically yes, but a retroactive day-pass fee (pase diario) of CLP 4,800–9,600 per highway applies. This is billed by licence plate recognition and sent to the registered vehicle owner. For rental cars, the rental company passes the charge through with an administrative surcharge. Getting a TAG or confirming your rental has one is strongly recommended for any stay longer than a day or two in Santiago.
Do motorcycles pay tolls in Chile?
Yes. Motorcycles pay reduced rates at intercity manual booths — typically CLP 200–400 per plaza (versus CLP 650–1,450 for cars at comparable plazas). On Santiago TAG highways, motorcycles must carry a TAG or incur the standard day-pass charge.
What happens if I drive a free-flow highway without a TAG and do not pay later?
The concession transmits unpaid passage data to the Ministerio de Obras Públicas (MOP), which issues an official infraction notice. Fines escalate with each unpaid passage. Foreign-plated vehicles may face collection actions if they return to Chile. Voluntary payment at pasastesintag.cl within 30 days avoids the fine.
When are punta (peak) rates applied?
Peak rates (tarifa punta) apply on weekends, public holidays, and long weekends (feriados largos). On weekdays (Monday to Thursday), the normal (hora valle) rate applies. Friday from mid-afternoon is often treated as punta by some concessions. Always check the specific concession's schedule as the exact cut-off times vary.
Do trucks pay more than cars?
Yes. Heavy vehicles (trucks, buses, vehicles with trailers) are classified by axle count and pay significantly higher rates — typically 2x to 4x the car rate depending on the number of axles and the specific concession. Truck operators should consult individual concession tariff schedules for exact rates by vehicle class.
Chile vs. Neighbouring Countries 2026
| Country | System Type | Typical Cost | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chile | TAG (urban) + Cash (intercity) | CLP 500–4,000/gantry | 770+ km; urban + Ruta 5 |
| Argentina | Electronic + Cash booths | ARS 300–2,000+/plaza | Extensive national network |
| Peru | Manual cash booths | PEN 2–12/plaza | Pan-American + regional |
| Bolivia | Manual cash booths | BOB 5–20/plaza | Main highways only |
| Brazil | Electronic (Sem Parar/ConectCar) + Cash | BRL 3–15/plaza | Largest network in South America |
| Uruguay | Manual + Electronic | UYU 50–200/plaza | National highway network |
Useful Links & Resources
South American Toll Guides:
- Argentina Toll Roads — Electronic and cash toll network across the Pampas and Patagonia
- Peru Toll Roads — Pan-American Highway plazas and regional routes
- Bolivia Toll Roads — Main highway toll plazas and rates
- Brazil Toll Roads — South America's largest and most complex concession toll network
- Uruguay Toll Roads — National highway tolls and electronic payment
- Ecuador Toll Roads — Andean highway system and toll rates
- Colombia Toll Roads — FlyPass electronic system and intercity plazas
Official Chile Concession Websites:
- Autopistas Santiago (VíasChile/Abertis): autopistassantiago.cl — TAG accounts, Santiago highway maps, gantry rates
- Costanera Norte: costaneranorte.cl — Northern ring, Túnel San Cristóbal rates and TAG info
- Vespucio Norte Express: vespucionorte.cl — Account management and tariff schedule
- Ruta Maipo: rutamaipo.cl — Santiago–Talca corridor, Acceso Sur rates
- Pago sin TAG: pasastesintag.cl — Online payment for free-flow passages without TAG
- Ministerio de Obras Públicas (MOP): mop.gob.cl — Concession oversight, official tariff tables, infraction resolution