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- Tolls Are Here To Stay. Minister Explains The Mind-Boggling Financial Nightmare Of Abolishing Them Completely
Tolls Are Here To Stay. Minister Explains The Mind-Boggling Financial Nightmare Of Abolishing Them Completely

We’ve all been there: staring at the toll fare display at the plaza, listening to the beep of our Touch 'n Go card or RFID tag, and feeling that collective, nationwide pang of annoyance. For years, the dream of entirely toll-free Malaysian highways has been a recurring, highly emotional talking point.
But it’s time for a massive, data-backed reality check.
Works Minister Datuk Seri Alexander Nanta Linggi has straight-up confirmed that tolls are not going anywhere anytime soon. While that might not be the comforting news everyday commuters want to hear, the Minister broke down the behind-the-scenes financial math, and it turns out that completely erasing tolls would trigger an absolute financial nightmare for the country’s development.
The Billions Hidden Behind Your Toll Fare
Why can't we just get rid of them? It all comes down to maintenance.
Nanta explained that when you abolish a toll, the highway doesn't magically become free to run. Instead, the massive, staggering financial burden of keeping those multi-lane expressways smooth, well-lit, and structurally safe shifts completely off the concessionaires and lands squarely on the government.
"If you abolish tolls, the government will have to use its funds to maintain the roads, and they cost billions."
Speaking to the New Straits Times, Nanta broke down the harsh reality that if the federal government had to fork out billions of ringgit annually just to absorb highway maintenance and operation costs, that money would have to be aggressively diverted away from other critical necessities. We are talking about funds that are desperately needed to build public hospitals, fund schools, and develop vital infrastructure for rural communities.

Even if current highway operators were to pack up and hand everything over to the state tomorrow, the government would still be forced to find new third-party operators just to avoid being entirely saddled and crushed by the ongoing maintenance bills.
Why Building More Highways Isn't Saving M'sia Anymore
While existing tolls are staying put, the way Malaysia handles highway growth is undergoing a massive shift. The Minister made it clear that while our highway network is an indispensable economic backbone, the era of treating "more concrete" as the default solution to traffic jams is officially over.
"I don't think we can safely say we don't need roads any more in 50 years time. That's not right. Maybe we'll need fewer roads because there will be other modes of transport."
— Works Minister
The data heavily backs this up. The TomTom Traffic Index recorded Kuala Lumpur's congestion level at a brutal 43%. Adding more lanes simply isn't working anymore.

Works Minister Datuk Seri Alexander Nanta Linggi
Moving forward, Nanta envisions a future where the relentless pace of new highway construction can eventually slow down. Instead of relying solely on asphalt, he highlights that the nation must rely on a balanced transport mix, pointing to major rail developments like the East Coast Rail Link (ECRL) and Sarawak's interior rail lines as proof that rail can effectively shoulder the economic and commuter load.
However, he candidly admitted that achieving this seamless shift will require much sharper coordination and a unified nationwide blueprint between the Works and Transport Ministries.
The Real Solution: Making Our Roads Smarter
Instead of managing highways as isolated, separate silos, the goal under the Intelligent Transport System (ITS) Blueprint 2030 is to move toward a fully integrated national transport ecosystem.
Interestingly, Nanta highlighted that the real obstacle isn't a lack of advanced tech, it’s a data connection problem. The biggest hurdle lies in syncing up the actual digital infrastructure so that systems across federal agencies, state governments, local authorities, highway concessionaires, and enforcement bodies can seamlessly communicate and share traffic data with one another in real time.
Ultimately, the goal is to build a highly optimized, comprehensive transport mix. But the Minister left us with one final ultimatum: if our public transport alternatives aren't genuinely affordable, highly convenient, and safe, Malaysians will naturally always choose to stick to their personal cars and motorcycles.
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Sofea Najmi
A Bachelor of English Language and Literature graduate with an obsession for the finer details. Sofea uses her background in translation to decode the technicalities of automotive innovation. She is dedicated to delivering impactful, meticulously researched articles that provide a narrative far beyond the spec sheet. LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/3C018vv