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Indonesia Toll Roads Complete Guide

System: Electronic toll collection (e-Toll RFID card mandatory; MLFF pilot rolling out 2026)
Operators: PT Jasa Marga (state-owned), PT Hutama Karya, PT Waskita Toll Road, and private concessionaires
Currency: Indonesian Rupiah (IDR)
Coverage: Java, Sumatra, Kalimantan, Bali, Sulawesi — 3,000+ km operational as of 2026
Technology: RFID e-Toll card, ANPR cameras, GNSS-based MLFF gantry (Jagorawi pilot)

Do I Need an e-Toll Card for Indonesia? 2026 Update

Yes — an e-Toll card is mandatory on all Indonesian toll roads. Since October 2017, cash payment has been banned at all toll gates nationwide. Every driver using a toll road must carry a preloaded e-Toll card; there is no cash or credit card option at toll booths.

Key Reality: Vehicles without a valid e-Toll card cannot pass through toll gates. The gate will not open and enforcement officers will direct non-compliant vehicles to reverse — causing significant delays for other road users.

2026 Update: Indonesia's Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) system is in active rollout. The pilot on the Jagorawi Toll Road (Jakarta–Bogor–Ciawi) uses GNSS-based on-board units (OBUs) and ANPR cameras to charge vehicles without stopping. Full national deployment is targeted for 2026–2027. During the transition, both e-Toll card gates and MLFF gantries coexist on pilot sections.

For tourists and rental car users: Rental agencies typically provide a preloaded e-Toll card. Confirm with your rental company before departure. Cards can be topped up at Indomaret, Alfamart, ATMs, mobile banking apps, toll road service areas, and petrol stations.

Indonesia Toll Costs: Current Rates

Indonesian toll rates are set by the Ministry of Public Works and Housing (PUPR) and reviewed every two years under concession agreements. Rates vary by operator, vehicle class, and route.

Vehicle Classification System (2026)

Class Vehicle Type Description
Golongan I Passenger cars, SUVs, small minibuses 2-axle non-commercial, height up to 2.0 m
Golongan II Buses, medium trucks 2-axle commercial, height above 2.0 m
Golongan III Large trucks 3-axle commercial vehicles
Golongan IV Heavy trucks 4-axle commercial vehicles
Golongan V Extra-heavy and articulated trucks 5-axle and above

Note: Motorcycles are prohibited on all Indonesian toll roads and must use non-toll national roads.

Current Toll Rates by Road (2026)

Toll Road Section / Distance Gol. I (IDR) Gol. II (IDR) Gol. III–V (IDR)
Jagorawi (Jakarta–Bogor–Ciawi) Full route, approx. 59 km 16,000 24,000 32,000–48,000
Jakarta Inner Ring Road (JIRR) Semanan–Sunter, approx. 21 km 11,000 16,500 22,000–33,000
Jakarta Outer Ring Road 1 (JORR 1) Full circuit, approx. 45 km 16,500 24,500 33,000–49,500
Cipularang (Cikampek–Purwakarta–Padalarang) Full route, approx. 58 km 49,000 73,500 98,000–147,000
Semarang–Solo Full route, approx. 73 km 62,000 93,000 124,000–186,000
Bali Mandara Toll Road Full route, 12.7 km sea bridge 11,000 16,500 22,000–33,000
Trans-Java Toll Road Jakarta–Surabaya, approx. 780 km (cumulative, all sections) ~450,000 ~675,000 ~900,000–1,350,000
Trans-Sumatra (Lampung–Palembang) Approx. 189 km operational section ~95,000 ~142,500 ~190,000–285,000
Balikpapan–Samarinda (East Kalimantan) Full route, approx. 99 km ~60,000 ~90,000 ~120,000–180,000

Trans-Java total is cumulative across multiple concession sections and operators. Exchange rate reference: IDR 16,000 is approximately USD 1.00 (2026). Rates are per vehicle per trip and subject to biennial government review.

How to Pay Indonesia Tolls

All toll payments in Indonesia are cashless. The primary method is the e-Toll card; MLFF on-board units are being introduced alongside it in 2026.

1. e-Toll Card (RFID Prepaid — Standard Method):

  • Cards issued by Bank Mandiri (e-Toll), BCA (Flazz), BNI (TapCash), BRI (BRIZZI), and Bank DKI (JakCard)
  • All cards are interoperable across all toll gates nationwide
  • Recommended minimum balance: IDR 30,000 before city trips; IDR 500,000 before Trans-Java or Trans-Sumatra journeys
  • Top-up at Indomaret, Alfamart, ATMs, mobile banking (Livin by Mandiri, myBCA, BNIMobile), toll service areas, and petrol stations
  • Cards cost IDR 20,000–50,000 at banks, toll service areas, and minimarkets (includes starter balance)

2. Multi-Lane Free Flow / MLFF On-Board Unit (Pilot Phase 2026):

  • GNSS-based OBU installed in vehicle; no stopping required at MLFF gantries
  • Account managed via the Flo app (Jasa Marga) or Cantas platform
  • Currently active on Jagorawi pilot section; expanding to additional Jasa Marga roads during 2026
  • OBUs available at Jasa Marga rest areas and authorised dealers
  • Conventional e-Toll card lanes remain operational alongside MLFF gantries during the transition period

3. Flo App (Jasa Marga Digital Wallet):

  • Manages MLFF OBU account, e-Toll top-up reminders, and real-time toll cost tracking
  • Provides trip history and balance alerts
  • Available on iOS and Android

To calculate toll costs for cars, trucks, and all vehicle types across Indonesian toll roads, use the TollGuru Indonesia toll calculator:

Enforcement and Penalties

  • Insufficient balance: Gate does not open. Driver must reverse and top up before re-entering. Toll officers assist at gates but will not allow passage without a valid tap.
  • MLFF non-payment (pilot zone): ANPR cameras record the licence plate. A violation notice is issued with a payment grace period. Repeat offences may result in vehicle registration sanctions coordinated with the National Police traffic database.
  • Wrong vehicle class: Fines apply for deliberate under-classification. Officers conduct periodic spot checks at toll gates and rest areas.
  • Overloaded vehicles: Weigh-in-motion sensors at Trans-Java entry points direct overloaded trucks to weighbridges. Vehicles exceeding class limits may be refused entry or fined under Law No. 22/2009 on Road Traffic.
  • Motorcycles on toll roads: Immediate removal by traffic police and fines under the Road Traffic Law. No exceptions apply.

Recent Changes (2026)

MLFF National Rollout:

  • Jagorawi MLFF pilot expanded to additional entry/exit points; OBU registration opened to the public via Flo and Cantas platforms
  • Government target: MLFF mandatory on all Jasa Marga roads by end of 2026; private concessionaires to follow by 2027

Trans-Sumatra Progress:

  • Additional sections between Pekanbaru and Padang opened progressively in 2025–2026, extending the operational network to approximately 1,000 km
  • PT Hutama Karya revised toll rates on Lampung–Palembang and Indralaya–Prabumulih sections effective January 2026

New Jakarta Sections:

  • JORR 2 Cinere–Serpong section completed, linking southwest Tangerang to the southern Jakarta ring
  • Becakayu (Bekasi–Cawang–Kampung Melayu Elevated) East 2 section opened for traffic in 2026

Biennial Rate Adjustments:

  • Cipularang, Padaleunyi, and Bali Mandara Toll Road rates adjusted under the 2025/2026 biennial review cycle
  • Trans-Sumatra Lampung–Palembang and Indralaya–Prabumulih rates revised effective January 2026

IKN Access Road Development (East Kalimantan):

  • The operational Balikpapan–Samarinda Toll Road serves as the primary access corridor to the Nusantara Capital City (IKN). Additional IKN access toll roads are under construction with phased openings expected 2026–2028

Planning Your Journey

Typical Costs (Golongan I — Passenger Car):

  • Jakarta daily toll road commute: IDR 30,000–80,000
  • Jakarta to Bandung via Cipularang: approximately IDR 57,500–67,500 (multiple gate sections)
  • Jakarta to Semarang (Trans-Java, approx. 450 km): approximately IDR 250,000–280,000
  • Jakarta to Surabaya (Trans-Java full, approx. 780 km): approximately IDR 430,000–480,000
  • Bali Mandara crossing: IDR 11,000 each way

Practical Tips:

  • Top up before long trips: Service areas on Trans-Java and Trans-Sumatra have top-up facilities, but availability can be inconsistent on remote sections. Top up at a minimarket before departure.
  • Check balance before driving: Bank apps (Livin, myBCA) display e-Toll card balance. The Flo app shows MLFF account balance.
  • Rest areas on long-distance routes: Trans-Java toll roads have Type A, B, and C rest areas at regular intervals with fuel, food, ATMs, and e-Toll top-up. All are signposted with km distance from Jakarta.
  • Peak travel (Mudik/Lebaran): During Eid al-Fitr and year-end holidays, toll roads experience extreme congestion. The government typically implements contraflow operations on Trans-Java and may temporarily waive tolls on select sections. Plan journeys outside peak days if possible.
  • Toll-free alternatives: National roads (Jalan Nasional) parallel most toll corridors and are toll-free but significantly slower. Use Google Maps "avoid tolls" to route via these roads.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use a credit or debit card at Indonesian toll gates?

No. Only RFID e-Toll cards and MLFF OBUs are accepted. Credit and debit cards are not accepted at toll booths. Top up your e-Toll card at a minimarket or ATM before entering the toll road.

Are motorcycles allowed on Indonesian toll roads?

No. Motorcycles are strictly prohibited on all Indonesian toll roads. Motorcyclists must use parallel national roads. Toll roads without parallel routes have motorcycle underpasses or side-road provisions.

How can tourists top up an e-Toll card without an Indonesian bank account?

Top-up at minimarkets (Indomaret, Alfamart) accepts cash in IDR with no bank account required. Alternatively, purchase a card with a preloaded balance from a minimarket or toll service area (IDR 20,000–50,000). Rental car companies often include a preloaded card in the rental package.

What is MLFF and do I need an OBU right now?

MLFF (Multi-Lane Free Flow) is Indonesia's next-generation system using GPS-based tracking so vehicles pass toll gantries without stopping. As of 2026 it is in pilot phase on Jagorawi only. Your e-Toll card still works everywhere. OBUs are optional during the transition but give non-stop tolling convenience on pilot sections.

What happens if my e-Toll card runs out of balance mid-journey?

The gate will not open. A toll officer will approach to assist. You can top up via the officer's mobile device (available at most gates) or reverse out of the lane to top up elsewhere. Single gate deductions range from IDR 5,000 on city roads up to IDR 100,000+ on long-distance sections — carry sufficient balance.

Do electric vehicles receive toll discounts in Indonesia?

As of 2026 there is no national EV toll discount programme. EVs are classified by Golongan like all other vehicles based on axles and height. The government has discussed EV incentives but no toll rebate scheme is in effect nationwide.

Which bank's e-Toll card should I get?

All five cards — Bank Mandiri e-Toll, BCA Flazz, BNI TapCash, BRI BRIZZI, and Bank DKI JakCard — work at every toll gate in Indonesia. Choose whichever is easiest to top up given your bank relationships. Bank Mandiri e-Toll is the most widely sold at toll service areas and minimarkets nationwide.

Indonesia vs. Neighbouring Countries

Country System Type Typical Cost (Car) Key Difference
Indonesia e-Toll RFID + MLFF pilot IDR ~600–800/km Cashless mandatory; motorcycles prohibited on all toll roads
Malaysia Touch 'n Go RFID + electronic MYR 0.15–0.25/km Motorcycles pay reduced rates; RFID lane mandatory on major highways
Singapore ERP2 GNSS congestion pricing SGD 0.50–3.00/zone Most advanced system in the region; time-of-day demand pricing
Philippines RFID (Autosweep / Easytrip) + limited cash PHP 3–6/km Two separate RFID networks; cash still accepted on some sections
Thailand Easy Pass RFID + cash THB 25–75/trip Cash still widely accepted; flat rates per segment; expressways mainly Bangkok
Australia E-TAG electronic only AUD 0.25–0.50/km No cash; 3 states only; significant penalty fees without E-TAG

Official Resources

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