Tauranga MP calls for fee reduction on toll road

Tauranga MP Sam Uffindell has written to the NZTA asking the government agency to consider reducing the toll on the Takitimu Drive Toll Road until full operational standards are restored.

Tolls should be reduced on a Tauranga road where ongoing major roadworks have disrupted motorists’ journeys for “several years”, says the city’s electorate MP.

Sam Uffindell has written to the NZ Transport Agency, Waka Kotahi (NZTA), asking for a toll reduction or pause on the State Highway 29 Takitimu Drive Toll Road until the roadworks are complete.

He said motorists were enduring reduced speed limits, lane closures, and extended travel times because of ongoing upgrades and the under-construction Takitimu North Link new highway project.

NZTA says it does not reduce tolls for road works, and another local leader backs maintaining the full fee.

Stage one of the Takitimu North Link – Tauranga to Te Puna, which is one of National’s Roads of National Significance, will connect to the toll road.

Uffindell said his community appreciated the long-term benefits these improvements would deliver.

There was “frustration”, however, that motorists continued to be charged the full toll “despite the road not operating at its intended capacity or level of service”.

He said the reduced speeds of 70km/h or lower lengthened journey times, and traffic flow conditions were below the expected standards of a quality toll road.

Tolls on the road cost $2.10 per trip for cars, motorcycles and light commercial vehicles and $5.40 for heavy vehicles.

“The people of Tauranga deserve good quality roads, especially when that road is tolled,” Uffindell said.

Tauranga MP Sam Uffindell said he understood the importance of the services at 2nd Ave, having taken two of his three children there. Photo / Alex Cairns
Tauranga MP Sam Uffindell said he understood the importance of the services at 2nd Ave, having taken two of his three children there. Photo / Alex Cairns

“I drive on the road most weeks and share their frustration.”

He said it was frustrating for Tauranga residents to have two of New Zealand’s three toll roads (including the Tauranga Eastern Link) with new highways elsewhere, like Wellington’s Transmission Gully, not tolled.

“They need to be more fairly distributed around New Zealand.”

The Government confirmed in December that the Takitimu North Link would be tolled. Auckland, which has the tolled Northern Gateway, would get a second toll road when the Penlink opens, with the new Ōtaki to north of Levin road to also be tolled.

“Tauranga won’t be the only region with toll roads in the years ahead,” Uffindell said.

He said he generally supported tolling to enable new roading to be built sooner, but said roads should be in working order.

An ideal toll amount would consider the convenience the route offers, he said, balanced against the ongoing works, speed reductions and the poor surface quality.

The Takitimu Drive Toll Road on November 11, including Takitimu North Link works. Photo / NZTA
The Takitimu Drive Toll Road on November 11, including Takitimu North Link works. Photo / NZTA

Tauranga City Council Tauriko ward councillor Marten Rozeboom did not support Uffindell’s suggestion.

He said, at this phase of Takitimu North Link construction, Takitimu Drive was a “work site”, but his travel times had not been affected.

“I have not experienced any major delays on Takitimu Drive, and I enjoy seeing the progress being made as I drive past.”

Rozeboom said NZTA had assured him all funds collected from the tolls were for the construction and maintenance of roads in the region.

 Tauriko ward councillor Marten Rozeboom. Photo / David Hall
Tauriko ward councillor Marten Rozeboom. Photo / David Hall

“So I do not support a reduction in the toll during the construction of new roading infrastructure.”

The roads would improve travel around the region, increase efficiency and productivity, and open up land for development – and the work may not have even started yet without the toll, Rozeboom said.

Tolling had ”allowed many roading projects to be brought forward".

He said all of his conversations with the community had been positive and the major roading projects around Tauranga were on schedule.

“We in Tauranga and the Western Bay are under large growth pressure, and I accept any and all support that comes from the central Government that helps us meet this growth.”

Works on the Takitimu Drive Toll Road, shown here on November 11, are said to be on schedule. Photo / NZTA
Works on the Takitimu Drive Toll Road, shown here on November 11, are said to be on schedule. Photo / NZTA

The NZTA’s director of regional relationships in Waikato and Bay of Plenty, Andrew Corkill, acknowledged the concerns about the disruptions.

“NZTA appreciates that roadworks are frustrating and is working to minimise disruption.”

Corkill said NZTA did not remove tolls for roadworks.

“Tolling provides a source of revenue which enabled this road to be built much sooner than would have otherwise been possible.

“When the costs have been recovered, the tolls will be removed.”

He said all roads required maintenance and renewals, which meant disruptions.

Andrew Corkill is the NZTA's director of regional relationships in Waikato and Bay of Plenty.
Andrew Corkill is the NZTA's director of regional relationships in Waikato and Bay of Plenty.

“While we appreciate that works are frustrating, the work is happening to enable the city to grow, and will benefit road users in the long term.”

Corkill said works were under way at several locations along the toll road.

Stage one of the Takitimu North Link involved building a major interchange between Tauriko and the Tauranga CBD.

This included a 363m flyover bridge west of the existing toll road, a roundabout entry to the new highway, and a slip lane on the eastern side to keep traffic flowing from the CBD towards Tauriko.

“Our team has made amazing progress on the project to date, and those passing through this area will continue to see progress.”

Completion of stage one is scheduled for 2028.

NZTA had also recently completed maintenance work on the toll road as part of its summer maintenance programme.

Corkill said a future full road rebuild, between the interchange site and Tauriko, was planned and had funding approved.

“This work will improve journey quality in this area significantly and is currently being aligned, planned and programmed to be delivered as part of the Takitimu North Link project.”

He said NZTA had received Uffindell’s letter and would respond to him directly regarding his concerns.

Ayla Yeoman is a multimedia journalist based in Tauranga. She grew up in Taupō and studied at the University of Auckland, gaining a Bachelor of Arts degree majoring in Communications and Politics & International Relations. She has been a journalist since 2022.

11 comments

No

Posted on 14-11-2025 12:17 | By Angels

User pay.
Best way to fund projects and keeps everyones taxes lower .


IF...

Posted on 14-11-2025 12:19 | By morepork

...the tolls are cancelled when the costs have been recovered, as NZTA claim, then there is less case for diminishing or removing tolls right now.
However, many of us still remember that TCC clung to the tolls on the Harbour Bridge until they were legally forced to let them go (thanks to a group of local lawyers and Winston Peters, who never received proper recognition for what they did.)
It was no surprise to me to see a TCC member unconcerned about the cost of ANYTHING; that seems to be part of their "culture"...
Sam makes a fair point that if a service is not what it should be, then the service provider should be prepared to "show willing" with even a gesture of goodwill.
If it takes another legal fight to stop tolls when NZTA have been paid, then we have been ripped off. Don't hold your breath.


Why bother.

Posted on 14-11-2025 15:24 | By CliftonGuy

Here in Tauranga our rates are high enough without shelling out for tolls as well. Besides, I feel that the rate for heavy commercial vehicles is too low in comparison to private vehicles. Bearing in mind that commercial vehicles are heavier and therefore punish the road surface than lighter vehicles, commercial vehicles should pay the present toll at least, but per axle.
Me, I could not be bothered with the inconvenience of paying a toll for a road that I might use 3-4 times a year. I just don't use them.


Hats off to Sam Uffindell

Posted on 14-11-2025 15:34 | By The Sage

At last someone is trying for us. The toll should have been either stopped or well reduced until the work was completed. Make the Contractor’s payment dependent on the job being finished. That would ensure timely completion of the job and a good incentive.


We're in a contract

Posted on 14-11-2025 15:54 | By PGC

By charging a Toll NZTA are entering a contract with users of the road. We pay the toll, they provide a modern high speed road free from restrictions. NZTA are not keeping up with their side of the deal. It is the same with the TEL; there have been lane closures and speed restrictions on it for a few years now, but they are still charging a full toll to drive on half a road at half speed. I'm fully supportive of paying a toll if we get better roads faster, but when those roads are impeded the toll should be reduced accordingly. Not surprised at Marten Rozeboom's view though; the council's main objective is to relieve residents of their hard earned cash. Nice to see Sam Uffindell sticking up for residents of the city. Shows he's not out of touch.


Pending electronic RUC's

Posted on 14-11-2025 16:39 | By Batch

..and a question arises....will the fee's payable on all toll roads be removed when the electronic RUC scenario comes into play on all vehicles...or...are we going to experience double dipping by government/local councils...ie you end up paying your RUC plus a toll when using a tolled road.


Payment for Service

Posted on 14-11-2025 17:06 | By Fernhill22

Totally agree with Sam on this one, users are paying a toll (premium) to use a road that enables us to get from A to B quicker than using the standard network & getting caught in congestion. For this premium of paying a toll there is an expectation that the road is maintained to a high standard, allowing traffic to move freely & enabling the user to get from A to B quicker than using the normal road network. At the moment the road is sub-standard & patched together and because of the ongoing construction it has speed limitations in place slowing the flow of traffic. This toll road must have been paid off years ago as it's been in place 20+ years, why are we paying for a sub-standard service. This Toll should be removed considering TGA already has 2 toll roads in place & another one coming.


For whom the road tolls

Posted on 14-11-2025 19:28 | By john balkwill

Rozeboom is wrong! A toll placed on any road is not there to subsidise other parts of the network.


tolls

Posted on 15-11-2025 08:28 | By peter pan

Nothing is free,somebody has to pay for it .I am a great beleaver in user pays.


Ever increasing Tauranga $$$

Posted on 15-11-2025 21:50 | By MelS

What a good point from Sam! the traffic is horrendous & dangerous, reducing the toll fee would be common sense but I suppose we're too in debt here paying off the new Tauranga Council City building & our ever increasing rates to be given a chance to save anything, people will keep leaving NZ with this sort of attitude from the powerful one's that could actually make fair decisions...


Keep the tolls

Posted on 16-11-2025 13:19 | By Kancho

Tolls fund roads and hasten better travel. I love the toll roads north and happy to pay to use them. So personally happy paying for a smooth quicker trip. Removing tolls will jam them up and negate the advantage and even pleasure using them. I have a prepay account that tops up automatically and really don't miss it just part of owning and enjoying a car . Probably not a popular point of view lol


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