Skip to main content

Britain’s M6toll rewards its 190 millionth customer

Britain’s M6toll motorway - now up for sale - has awarded its 190 millionth customer with a year’s free travel. James Hodson, director of motorway operations for toll road operator Midland Expressway, said it could save the driver around €2,550 over the year. The driver’s car was fitted with an M6toll Tag, a small electronic device fitted to a vehicle’s windscreen. It allows users to pre-pay for their journeys and pass through a dedicated lane usually without the need to stop. Tags normally cost a mon
May 18, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Britain’s M6toll motorway - now up for sale - has awarded its 190 millionth customer with a year’s free travel.

James Hodson, director of motorway operations for toll road operator Midland Expressway, said it could save the driver around €2,550 over the year.

The driver’s car was fitted with an M6toll Tag, a small electronic device fitted to a vehicle’s windscreen. It allows users to pre-pay for their journeys and pass through a dedicated lane usually without the need to stop. Tags normally cost a monthly fee of €1.28 per Tag to lease and provide a 5% discount per trip.

Midland Expressway said it would reward every subsequent 10 millionth customer with a year’s free passage on the pay as you go motorway, which opened in 2004.

Each day more than 47,000 drivers use the 43km M6toll – Britain’s only toll road - that skirts the English city of Birmingham. It is unofficially part of Europe’s E-road E05 and is subject to the same regulations and policing as other motorways in the UK.
 
Midland Expressway  won a public-private partnership competition in 1991 to privately build the road and operate it under a 53-year concession, lasting to 2054. MEL was to finance construction and recoup its costs by setting and collecting tolls. At the end of the concession period the infrastructure will revert to the government. Toll rates are set at the discretion, with no cap on the rates charged.

The 27 owners of M6toll, including Crédit Agricole, Commerzbank and Banco Espirito Santo, took over the road from infrastructure group 2378 Macquarie in December 2013 after a debt restructuring.

Midland Expressway Limited (MEL), part of Macquarie Atlas Roads, continues to operate the six-lane motorway around the English city of Birmingham for the lenders. But MEL reported a loss of nearly €37 million in 2014, down from around €42 million a year before.

While operation of the road makes a profit, construction costs for the road forced the owner group to put it up for sale to recover some of the €2.45 billion of debt.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • FETC innovation from Highway Toll to ITS Taiwan smart city
    March 6, 2017
    FETC innovation from Highway Toll to ITS Taiwan smart city – a Global Road Achievement Award winner says IRF. The Far Eastern Electronic Toll Collection Company (FETC) has a bold vision for the future. FETC has achieved the most successful BOT project for ITS traf_ c management; it turns the traditional highway toll collection system into an integrated intelligent electronic toll collection (ETC) system for mobility management.
  • Highway 99 revisited
    March 6, 2024
    David Arminas recently returned to Seattle for an inside look at some of the features of the now-complete SR99 tunnel that was a World Highways key project report in November 2017.
  • UK: Currie & Brown acquires Sweett Group
    September 8, 2016
    Following the offer by Currie & Brown, a leading physical assets management and construction consultancy, to acquire Sweett Group plc, it was today announced that Sweett has been delisted. The combined entity will employ approximately 2,200 employees in over 60 offices in the Americas, Europe, India, the Middle East, the UK and the US. The cost of the purchase was not given.
  • New US$1.5bn bridge linking New Jersey, New York City
    April 26, 2013
    A consortium led by Australia-based Macquarie Group and Kiewit of the US, known as NYNJLink, is to build a new US$1.5bn bridge connecting New Jersey and New York City in the US. Chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey David Samson said that the Authority will hold on to the ownership of the existing Goethals Bridge. Upon completion, 35 yearly payments of roughly US$60 million per annum will be made to the consortium. A maximum of $500 million US Department of Transportation low-interest lo