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PhrasesReading Signs and MapsCosa vuol dire 'Pedaggio'?
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Cosa vuol dire 'Pedaggio'?

What does 'Toll' mean?

Pronunciation

'Pedaggio' — pe-DAD-jo. Soft 'gg' before 'io'; stress on the second syllable.

When to use it

Ask when you see 'Pedaggio' signs approaching a tollbooth on the motorway. This is critical information for drivers in Italy, where most motorways charge tolls.

What it means

'Pedaggio' means toll — the fee paid to use a road or bridge. The word comes from Latin 'pedaticum' (foot tax). Italian tolls are paid at 'caselli' (tollbooths). Signs approaching the casello show the accepted payment methods: cash, credit card, or Telepass transponder.

Variations

Quanto costa il pedaggio?

How much is the toll?

Ask the fare at the tollbooth.

Accettano la carta?

Do they accept card?

Credit/debit cards are accepted at most Italian tollbooths.

Ho il Telepass, posso passare?

I have Telepass, can I go through?

Telepass lanes are faster — orange overhead signs mark them.

Mini Dialogue

— Cosa vuol dire 'Pedaggio'? — Toll — devi pagare per usare questa autostrada. — Quanto pago da qui a Firenze? — Circa undici euro, dipende dal casello che esci.

— What does 'Toll' mean? — Toll — you have to pay to use this motorway. — How much do I pay from here to Florence? — About eleven euros, depends which exit you take.

Cultural Note

Italy's motorway tolls fund both maintenance and new construction. Costs vary significantly by route: Milan to Bologna costs about €13, Rome to Naples about €10. The Telepass system allows drivers to pass through without stopping — the toll is automatically billed to a bank account.