The Most Important Long-Term Story in Tolling Has a Scoreboard Problem
Ask most people inside the tolling industry what the biggest structural story of the next decade is, and you’ll hear some version of the same answer: Road User Charging. Ask them when it will actually happen at scale, and the answers get less confident.
The state-by-state picture in 2025 tells you why. Four states have adopted permanent RUC programs: Utah, Oregon, Virginia, and Hawaii. As of 2024, 40 states have conducted research into RUC, including pilots in states like California, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Kansas, and Georgia. Wa
Four states doing it. Forty states studying it.
That gap — between political consensus that RUC is necessary and operational reality of RUC at scale — is the actual story of where transportation funding reform stands right now. This post maps both sides of it.
Why RUC Is Inevitable in Theory
The case for road user charging starts with a funding crisis that is not in dispute. Fuel taxes account for 83% of the Highway Trust Fund’s revenue. But for decades, HTF revenues have been declining. Increased fuel efficiency and federal gas and diesel taxes that have not been raised since 1993 — cutting their inflation-adjusted values by over 50% — combined with surging road repair costs, have led to a steady decrease in the fund’s annual income. Electrification Coalition
The Congressional Budget Office has put a number on where this leads. Without fundamental changes, the Highway Trust Fund will be insolvent by 2028, with the deficit swelling to nearly $280 billion by 2034. In 2024 alone, the user-pay gap — the difference between dedicated revenues and outlays — was $26.7 billion, and it is projected to reach $40 billion annually by the end of the decade. Taxpayers for Common Sense
Gasoline tax receipts are expected to fall by 39 percent over the next ten years. The shift to electric vehicles — while good for air quality — is devastating for a transportation system that relies on per-gallon fuel taxes to pay for itself. Taxpayers for Common Sense
The math is simple and brutal. The federal gas tax has been fixed at 18.4 cents per gallon since 1993. 18.4 cents bought 53 percent less in 2023 than it did in 1993. Peterson Foundation Every year that goes by without reform, the gap between what drivers pay and what roads cost grows wider.
A mileage-based user fee — a road usage charge — addresses this structurally in a way that gas tax increases cannot, because it is fuel-neutral. An EV driver, a hybrid driver, and a gasoline driver all pay the same per-mile rate. The system is indifferent to what’s in the tank.
“In order to achieve parity with the gas tax, policymakers would consider the issues of mandatory participation and an RUC rate that effectively replaces revenues previously generated by the gas tax.” — Transportation policy researcher, GovTech
The Four States That Went Permanent
Oregon: The Pioneer
Oregon launched OReGO in 2015, making it the first state in the nation to establish a permanent RUC program. Oregon’s OReGO program allows electric vehicle and high-MPG vehicle owners to bypass the state’s supplemental registration fee and pay $43 per year plus 2 cents per mile. EVs not participating in OReGO pay a two-year registration of $316, which comes to $158 per year. Government Technology The program is voluntary and has enrolled over 2,000 participants across its decade of operation — a small number relative to Oregon’s total vehicle fleet, but a durable proof-of-concept.
Utah: The Cost-Efficiency Case Study
Utah launched its RUC program in 2020 and has become the most instructive operational case study in the country — not because of its scale, but because of how it has evolved. Utah currently charges 1.11 cents per mile and adjusts for inflation annually. Since implementation, adjustments have reduced administrative costs by over 60%, and mileage revenue is anticipated to exceed expenses for the first time in FY25. Electrification Coalition
The mechanism behind that cost reduction is worth understanding in detail. The state Department of Transportation cut costs by reducing mileage reporting frequency and by removing plug-in devices as a mileage reporting option. Drivers may now choose between OEM-connected telematics and odometer reading using a smartphone app. The program updates also eliminated any sharing of location data, addressing data privacy concerns. Electrification Coalition
That last point — eliminating location data sharing — is significant. Privacy anxiety is one of the most consistent obstacles to public acceptance of RUC programs. Utah’s pivot to odometer photos and OEM telematics demonstrates that mileage can be verified without tracking where drivers go. As of July 2025, the program has collected $1,531,116 in revenue Utah Legislature, with approximately 7,200 vehicles enrolled.
Virginia: The Revenue Generator
Virginia’s program — called Mileage Choice — is the only one among the four that is generating meaningful additional transportation revenue. The voluntary program allows drivers of fuel-efficient, hybrid, or electric vehicles to pay their Highway Use Fee per mile rather than as a lump sum. Virginians who drive less than 11,600 miles annually can save money by participating in the Mileage Choice program. Government Technology Virginia’s program is notable because it frames the RUC not as a new tax but as a more equitable alternative to an existing fee — a framing that has contributed to stronger enrollment than programs that lead with the per-mile charge.
Hawaii: The Most Aggressive Test Case
Hawaii’s HiRUC program launched July 1, 2025 — making it the most recently enacted of the four permanent programs and the one with the most consequential policy design. The new road usage charge in Hawaii is $8 per 1,000 miles — less than a penny per mile — and is capped at $50. Odometers will be read and recorded each year during annual vehicle inspections. Avalara
What makes Hawaii different from the other three is the mandatory deadline built into its legislation. Beginning July 1, 2028, all EV drivers will be subject to RUC. Hiruc That makes Hawaii the only state in the country with a firm date for mandatory participation — and it is the most direct test yet of whether the voluntary-to-mandatory transition can be made without significant political backlash.
Hawaii’s plan extends further: the state has a timeline to extend RUC to all vehicles by 2033. Washington State House Democrats If that holds, Hawaii will be the first state to fully replace the gas tax with a mileage-based system for its entire light-duty vehicle fleet.
Why 40 States Are Still Watching
The gap between four permanent programs and 40 states researching is not accidental. There are structural reasons why RUC adoption has been slow, and they deserve honest examination — because they are the same obstacles any new state will face.
The Mandatory Participation Problem
Every permanent RUC program in the United States is voluntary. And voluntary participation, by design, limits both the revenue generated and the policy impact. States that have moved forward with RUC programs are taking the approach of “let’s do what we can right now, and we will adjust as we need.” Government Technology That’s a pragmatic posture, but it also means that current programs are essentially large pilots, not functioning replacements for the gas tax.
The transition from voluntary to mandatory is where the political resistance concentrates. Mandatory mileage tracking for all vehicles requires public trust in government data stewardship that most agencies have not yet earned — and a legislative appetite for a direct per-mile charge on all drivers that few elected officials have shown. Hawaii’s 2028 mandatory deadline for EVs will be the first real test of whether that transition can be made.
The Data Privacy Concern
The most visceral objection to GPS-based mileage reporting is that it creates a government record of everywhere you drive. Interstate travel reconciliation requires a GPS reporting method, which many pilots found some of their participants felt unease toward due to privacy concerns. Eno Center for Transportation
The technical community has largely addressed this: for passenger vehicles, the GPS system is one-way — not two-way — just as it is on smartphones. The car knows where it is thanks to the GPS, but the GPS itself does not know where the car is. The OBU or other recording device that manages an RUC system would use the GPS signal to record where the car is traveling. Then, at the end of the month, mileage totals could be organized according to jurisdiction owed, and the OBU would ping the driver’s account to dispense payment to a central authority. ITIF
RUC legislation should include technical and operational measures to ensure privacy rights, including ensuring that there is no requirement for vehicle owners to provide location data by offering mileage reporting choices TRB — as Utah has done by pivoting to odometer photos. The privacy problem is technically solvable. The communication problem — convincing the public it has been solved — is harder.
The Interstate Travel Reconciliation Problem
This is the operational challenge that gets the least public attention and is arguably the most technically complex. If a Utah driver takes a road trip through Nevada, Colorado, and Wyoming, each state’s roads are being used but only Utah collects the RUC. The federal government will likely need to consider and regulate these interstate transactions of data and funds. In some programs, pilot participants who drove out of state could apply for a refund for those miles driven. This manual process will become overly burdensome when VMT-fee program participation is made mandatory. Eno Center for Transportation
Oregon and California have explored what complementary programs could look like through an interoperability study as part of the OReGO program; a cloud-based clearinghouse was used to reconcile funds across state lines. Eno Center for Transportation Two regional coalitions — RUC America (primarily western states) and the Eastern Transportation Coalition (primarily I-95 corridor states) — are working toward interoperability frameworks. But a national clearinghouse that handles cross-state mileage reconciliation at scale does not yet exist. This is the International Fuel Tax Agreement problem all over again, rebuilt from scratch for a new era.
The Commercial Vehicle Complexity Layer
The IRP — International Registration Plan — took decades to develop a workable interstate framework for commercial vehicle mileage-based fees. RUC advocates are essentially proposing to rebuild that infrastructure for passenger vehicles, at an order of magnitude greater scale and complexity. Interstate truckers are required to report mileage each quarter to the International Fuel Tax Association. IFTA balances payments among the states based on miles driven in each state. Motor carriers, however, have an incentive to underreport mileage in high-tax states. ITIF A VMT system for commercial vehicles would need to solve for the same gaming incentives that currently plague IFTA, with more sophisticated technology and tighter interstate reconciliation than anything currently in production.
What the Gap Actually Tells Us
The gap between four permanent programs and 40 states researching reflects an honest accounting of where the technology, policy, and public trust are relative to where they need to be.
It is not a failure. Oregon has been running OReGO for a decade. Utah has cut administrative costs by over 60% and is projecting revenue to exceed expenses for the first time. Hawaii has put a mandatory date on the calendar. These are real milestones. What they aren’t is a national system. And the distance between a functional four-state voluntary experiment and a mandatory per-mile fee on all vehicles in all 50 states is, to use an industry term, significant.
The 2026 surface transportation reauthorization debate will be the next major federal pressure point. The April 2025 proposal to create a federal vehicle registration fee was considered as part of the 2026 surface transportation reauthorization, and while it did not make it into the final version of the legislation, the idea is still being considered. Utah Legislature Congress is circling the funding gap but has not yet landed on a durable solution.
Studies show that by 2030, as much as half of the gas tax revenue that could be collected will be lost to fuel efficiency. States need to explore more sustainable transportation funding models, like RUC, to generate adequate revenue to support their road maintenance and improvement needs. Rucamerica
The question is no longer whether road user charging is the right long-term answer. The structural math makes that case on its own. The question is who moves from research to permanent program next — and whether Hawaii’s mandatory 2028 deadline produces a workable model or a cautionary tale that slows the rest of the field down.
Forty states are watching to find out.
State-by-State Snapshot: The Four Permanent Programs
| State | Program Name | Launch | Rate | Participation | Notable Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oregon | OReGO | 2015 | 2¢/mile | ~2,000+ vehicles | First in the nation; gas tax credit for participants |
| Utah | Utah RUC | 2020 | 1.11¢/mile | ~7,200 vehicles | 60%+ admin cost reduction; OEM telematics + odometer photo |
| Virginia | Mileage Choice | 2022 | Variable (HUF-based) | ~32,000 vehicles | Strongest enrollment; framed as fee alternative, not new tax |
| Hawaii | HiRUC | July 2025 | 0.8¢/mile ($8/1,000 mi) | EV drivers statewide | Mandatory for EVs in 2028; all vehicles by 2033 |
Sources
- Electrification Coalition — Utah’s Road Usage Charge: Paving a Road to the Future (May 2025) — electrificationcoalition.org
- Washington State Transportation Commission — Road Usage Charge FAQ — wstc.wa.gov
- Utah Legislature — Utah’s Road Usage Charge Program Report (September 2025) — le.utah.gov
- HiRUC — Hawaii Road Usage Charge: What Do I Need to Know — hiruc.org
- Avalara — Hawaii Road Usage Charge for EVs Begins July 1, 2025 — avalara.com
- GovTech — Miles Driven a Key Metric for Road Usage Charge Programs (February 2025) — govtech.com
- Eno Center for Transportation — The Current Status of State VMT Fees — enotrans.org
- ITIF — A Policymaker’s Guide to Road User Charges — itif.org
- Peter G. Peterson Foundation — The Highway Trust Fund Explained — pgpf.org
- Taxpayers for Common Sense — Road to Insolvency (April 2025) — taxpayer.net
- TRB / National Cooperative Highway Research Program — Privacy Protection: Road Usage Charge Guide — crp.trb.org
- RUC America — FAQs — rucamerica.org