Over the last two decades, Mexico has made massive investments in its road infrastructure in an effort to connect the country’s main towns and cities with safe, fast and reliable roads.
Mexico’s toll roads are generally four-lane highways (dual carriageways), except in mountainous regions, where at times the road is limited to a single lane each way, due to the limited space available and additional costs involved when building a road into the edge of a mountain.
The total cost you’ll pay on a particular toll road will depend on how far you travel along it. You effectively pay for your journey in parts, with payment booths set out along the highway at major towns or turnoff points. Every time you go through a toll booth, you pay an additional fee, which covers your cost to the next toll booth, and so on.
Insurance on Toll Roads
At each toll booth, you will be given a receipt for the money you pay. This receipt is also your insurance certificate. If you crash, or are involved in an accident, you will need to present this receipt in order to avoid paying road repair and maintenance charges.
Mexican Toll Road Terminology
Routes which have toll roads connecting the destinations, also have a free alternative road. When you’re driving in Mexico, watch the signs and follow the route for the road type you want to use. Here is a list of the key words to look out for:
LIBRE = Free Road. Free roads are less well maintained, single-lanes each way that will take you longer to travel across. However, to see some of the ‘off the beaten track’ places, you’ll need to avoid Toll Roads, as they often double as “by-passes” (see term below). It’s recommended that you don’t take the free roads after dark.
CUOTA = Toll Road. Follow this sign if you want to take the toll road to the destination you are traveling to. Note that the highway numbers are often the same, so you can be on the right highway number, heading in the right direction, but on a free (slower) road than you’d like to be. For toll roads, follow the signs that read “CUOTA”.
LIBRAMIENTO = Bypass. Sometimes, major free roads that connect big towns and cities will give you an option to take the “Libramiento” route. This is like a toll road (and sometimes it’s part of the toll road) which, for a fee, will enable you to by-pass the smaller town city if you don’t want to go there, saving you time, and perhaps the hassle of getting lost. Libramientos work in the same way as toll roads.
Destination | Highways | Distance |
---|---|---|
Acapulco | 95,92 | 241mi/388km |
Aguascalientes | 57,45,110-West | 323mi/519km |
Cuernavaca | 95 | 55mi/89km |
Guadalajara | 15,55,15 | 339mi/546km |
Monterrey | 57,57-Free,40 | 577mi/929km |
Morelia | 15,55,15 | 188mi/302km |
Oaxaca | 150,135 | 280mi/451km |
Puebla | 150 | 76mi/123km |
Queretaro | 57 | 131mi/211km |
Taxco | 95 | 118mi/190km |
Teotihuacan | 130 | 31mi/50km |
Veracruz | 150 | 76mi/123km |
From Guadalajara
Destination | Highways | Distance |
---|---|---|
Aguascalientes | 80,110-West | 152mi/245km |
Manzanillo | 54 | 186mi/300km |
Mazatlan | 15 | 321m/517km |
Morelia | 15 | 181mi/292km |
Puerto Vallarta | 15,68-South | 198mi/319km |
From Monterrey To:
Destination | Highways | Distance |
---|---|---|
Chihuahua | 40,45 | 512mi/824km |
Guadalajara | 40,54-Free | 481mi/774km |
From Cancun To:
Destination | Highways | Distance |
---|---|---|
Merida | 180 | 196mi/315km |
Playa del Carmen | 180 | 31mi/50km |
Tulum | 180 | 56mi/90km |
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