Harbour bridge tolls to go both ways from 2028

Dec 11, 2025
New Daily
Drivers will be tolled in both directions on the Sydney Harbour Bridge from late 2028, the NSW government says.
Under the decision announced on Thursday, which defies the state Labor government’s pre-election promise of “no new tolls”, drivers will be hit with a toll to use the bridge and the harbour tunnel.
The Minns government said more road charges were needed to fund critical relief for Sydney’s road commuters.
A $60 weekly toll “cap” introduced in 2024, designed to minimise the burden on western Sydney drivers, had been set to end within weeks. Under the latest changes, it will become permanent.
“This is part of reorienting the entire system to put motorists first,” NSW Transport Minister John Graham said.
“We are committing the extra revenue to ongoing toll relief, which is most needed in western Sydney.”
There has been one-way tolling on the Harbour Bridge since 1970.
But the status quo was threatened when the former Liberal government announced the under-construction Western Harbour Tunnel would be tolled in both directions.
In the latest overhaul to the system plaguing what has been described as the world’s most-tolled city, administration fees for paying toll notices will also be scrapped.
Amid marathon negotiations to curtail their power, private toll operators have agreed to dump the fees, which brought in $618 million in the past financial year alone.
The chief executive of toll operator Transurban, Michelle Jablko, said the process to simplify charges to motorists was constructive and positive.
“This outcome is a step towards delivery of a fairer and simpler system … while continuing to protect the value of the investment Transurban and its partners have made,” she said.
While locking in the toll relief indefinitely may bump up the volume of drivers using the toll roads, Transurban has also agreed to hand over any extra revenue coming from higher traffic from mid-2026.
In January, the government revealed that drivers had left more than $140 million in possible relief unclaimed in the first year of the “toll cap”.
Leaders in Sydney’s outer suburbs have welcomed the decision to make the “cap” – actually a quarterly rebate scheme – permanent.
“This is a win for western Sydney commuters, who often have to spend more time on the road and travel longer distances,” Western Sydney Dialogue chief executive Adam Leto said.