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Japan Highway ETC Card Guide for Foreign Drivers | Tourist Card, Japan Expressway Pass & Discounts

“Can foreigners actually use Japan’s ETC system?” “What’s the cheapest way to handle highway tolls when I rent a car?” If you’re planning a road trip in Japan, the ETC (Electronic Toll Collection) system is your single biggest cost lever. Use it right and you save 30% on tolls. Skip it and you pay full price plus the awkward fumble for cash at every booth. This guide covers exactly how foreign drivers access ETC — through the ETC Tourist Card, the all-you-can-drive Japan Expressway Pass, and rental car bundles — plus toll booth procedures, discounts, and the rookie traps that catch first-timers.

💡 Quick Facts (10-second summary)

  • Tourist-only “ETC Tourist Card” rentable at car rental counters (~¥3,000 deposit, refundable).
  • “Japan Expressway Pass” (JEP) flat-rate plan: 7 days from ¥21,800 (~$145).
  • ETC discounts: late night (0-4am) 30% off, weekends 30% off (regional), commuting time up to 50% off.
  • Toll lanes are color-coded: ETC only (purple), ETC/Cash (mixed), Cash (orange).
  • ETC2.0-equipped cars get bonuses like rest area exits and real-time traffic.

📑 Table of Contents

Japan’s ETC system, foreigner edition

ETC (Electronic Toll Collection System) is Japan’s nationwide electronic tolling — equivalent to E-ZPass in the US, Telepass in Italy, or AutoPASS in Norway. It lets you pass through toll booths at 20 km/h without stopping or paying cash. Whether you use ETC determines whether your road trip is 30% cheaper or full price.

History and adoption

Launched in 2001. As of 2025, roughly 94% of vehicles passing through Japan’s expressway tolls use ETC. The remaining 6% cash-only lanes are being phased out, with full ETC migration targeted for 2030. “Driving with cash” is becoming legacy.

Three challenges foreign drivers face

  • Personal ETC cards aren’t available to short-stay tourists: Standard ETC cards are issued by Japanese credit card companies and require Japan residency or a Residence Card.
  • Some rental cars don’t have an ETC unit installed: Especially budget kei-car plans and some regional outlets.
  • Wrong-lane mistakes can result in penalties: Entering an ETC-only lane without a valid card counts as toll evasion.

3 ways foreigners can use ETC

You as a short-stay foreigner have three solid options to drive Japan’s expressways comfortably with a rental car.

🚗 Foreigner ETC options compared

Option 1
ETC Tourist Card
(per-trip rental)
Option 2
Japan Expressway Pass
(unlimited flat rate)
Option 3
Rental car
ETC bundle plan

Option 1: ETC Tourist Card (short-stay only)

Provided by NEXCO Central and NEXCO West. Apply at the rental counter with your passport and a ~¥3,000 deposit (refundable on return). Actual toll charges are billed when you return the car. Available at major chains: Toyota Rental Lease, Nippon Rent-A-Car, Times Car, ORIX.

Option 2: Japan Expressway Pass (JEP)

Joint program by NEXCO East/Central/West offering unlimited expressway driving for a fixed period. If you’re touring multiple regions of Japan, this is by far the best deal. Detailed in the JEP section below.

Option 3: Rental car ETC bundle

Major rental companies offer plans where the ETC unit is included for ~¥500-1,000/day. The ETC card is provided by the rental company or you separately rent a Tourist Card. Easiest setup, but cost adds up over multi-day rentals.

Japan Expressway Pass deep dive

JEP is the foreign-tourist-only flat-rate expressway pass. Buy at airport rental car counters or major rental locations.

Plan Duration Price Coverage
JEP 7-day 7 days ¥21,800 Nationwide (excl. urban expressways: Shuto, Hanshin etc.)
JEP 14-day 14 days ¥31,500 Same as 7-day
Hokkaido Expressway Pass 2-14 days ¥3,800-13,500 Hokkaido only
Central Nippon Expressway Pass 3-7 days ¥5,000-13,000 Central / Hokuriku
Kyushu Expressway Pass 2-10 days ¥3,500-10,000 Kyushu / Okinawa

When JEP makes sense

One-way Tokyo→Kyoto on regular tolls is roughly ¥12,000 (passenger car, no weekend discount). If you’re doing two long-distance hops, the 7-day pass at ¥21,800 already pays for itself. For Hokkaido-only trips, the regional Hokkaido Expressway Pass is usually much cheaper.

JEP eligibility

  • Non-Japan resident (visa check required)
  • Must be paired with a rental car (private cars not eligible)
  • Passenger cars and kei cars only (motorcycles & large vehicles excluded)

Using ETC at toll plazas

The basic flow resembles ETC systems worldwide, but Japan has specific quirks worth knowing.

📅 Standard ETC flow

Before driving
Insert ETC card, confirm green light on unit

Entering toll
Use “ETC only” or “ETC/Cash” lane, slow to 20 km/h or less

Gate opens
Green light + voice confirms “card inserted”

Exit toll
Same procedure, voice announces toll amount

Lane color coding

  • ETC only (purple): ETC vehicles only. No cash entry allowed
  • ETC/Cash (green + orange): Both methods accepted
  • Cash (orange): Cash, credit card, prepaid options

Speed at the gate

The “20 km/h or less” sign is mandatory, not advisory. Going faster risks crashing into the gate arm and incurs a penalty if your equipment fails. First-timers should aim for 10-15 km/h to be safe.

All ETC discount programs

Main discounts available with ETC. Late-night and rural commuting times are especially generous.

30% OFF
Late-night discount (0-4am)
30% OFF
Weekend (rural, passenger cars)
Up to 50%
Weekday commute (rural)
Free
ETC2.0 rest area exit

Late-night discount (0-4am passage)

If your toll passage falls between 0:00 and 4:00am, automatic 30% off. Hokuriku, Tohoku, Kyushu — perfect for long-distance overnight drives. If you’re driving rural sections anyway, plan an early start to capture this.

Weekend discount

30% off on rural expressways on weekends and holidays (passenger and kei cars only). Urban expressways and the Tokyo Metropolitan Inner Loop are excluded. For family trips on Kanetsu or Tohoku Expressway, weekends are gold.

Weekday commuting (rural-only)

Up to 50% off rural expressway tolls during 6-9am and 5-8pm on weekdays for trips under 100 km — but only if you cross the toll 20+ times in a calendar month. Rarely useful for tourists.

How to choose your ETC method

“OK, but what should I actually pick?” — situation-by-situation answers.

🤔 Best ETC method for your trip

1-3 day short trip

ETC Tourist Card
1+ week multi-region

JEP 7-day
Hokkaido focus

Hokkaido Expressway Pass
City driving only

Cash or credit OK

Pattern 1: 1-3 day short drives

For Tokyo-area or Osaka-area weekend drives, use ETC Tourist Card + ETC-equipped rental car. The deposit is refunded so it’s effectively free. Late-night and weekend discounts make it worth it for a single 200-km round trip.

Pattern 2: 7-day+ multi-region tour

Tokyo→Kyoto→Hiroshima→Kyushu? JEP 7-day at ¥21,800 is hands-down the best deal. Even with three rest area stops daily, you’ll come out ahead vs paying tolls per use.

Pattern 3: Hokkaido-focused trip

Hokkaido Expressway Pass at ¥3,800-13,500 is far cheaper than nationwide JEP. If you don’t go to Honshu, this is the obvious pick.

Troubleshooting

Gate doesn’t open

80% of cases: card not inserted, expired, or unit malfunction. ① Stop immediately (before the next car arrives), ② Use the yellow intercom for the operator, ③ The bar will be raised manually. Pull to the left, hazards on, then deal with it. No need to panic.

Toll seems too high

Verify pre-trip with NEXCO’s toll search tool. If actual charge is higher, you may have exited at the wrong IC. Save receipts to confirm at car return.

Forgot the card before departing

Take the “Cash” lane and pay cash. There’s no retroactive discount system — that ETC discount is gone. Make a pre-drive checklist habit.

Common misconceptions

Myth 1: “Foreigners can’t use ETC at all”

False. ETC Tourist Card exists specifically for this. Anyone can use ETC with a 5-minute counter procedure at the rental company.

Myth 2: “JEP works on every expressway”

False. Urban expressways (Shuto, Hanshin, Nagoya) are excluded. You’ll pay separately when driving downtown Tokyo or Osaka. Smart move: use general roads through dense urban centers.

Myth 3: “Cash payment also gets discounts”

False. Late-night, weekend, and commute discounts require ETC. Cash payers pay full price. On a 1,000-km drive, that’s ¥5,000+ extra.

Drawbacks & cautions

Caution 1: Smart ICs are ETC-only

Some interchanges (called “Smart IC”) only accept ETC. Cars without an ETC card can’t exit there. Confirm with your nav system before relying on these.

Caution 2: Detailed billing requires personal ETC card

The ETC usage lookup service requires registration with a personal ETC card number. Tourist cards aren’t included. Keep paper receipts for all transactions.

Caution 3: ETC2.0 is a different system

ETC2.0 is the next-gen system (real-time traffic info, rest area exits). Most rental cars don’t have ETC2.0. Don’t assume the new features will be available.

Caution 4: Highway buses are separate

Highway buses use a different fare system. ETC isn’t relevant unless you’re driving a passenger or kei rental car.

FAQ

Q1: Can I use ETC Tourist Card without a credit card?

Yes, but final settlement at car return must be by cash or credit. Useful for tourists without Japan-issued credit cards.

Q2: Does ETC work for motorcycle rentals?

Yes, but JEP doesn’t cover motorcycles. Late-night and weekend discounts still apply.

Q3: Can I rent a child seat alongside the ETC car?

Yes. Toyota, Nippon, Times rent child seats at ¥550-1,100/day. Independent of ETC.

Q4: What happens to ETC charges in an accident?

Charges accrue normally. Focus on insurance claims and rental company support; tolls are minor in the scheme of things.

Q5: Can I combine ETC discounts?

Generally no — late-night/weekend/commute discounts don’t stack. The largest applicable discount is auto-applied.

📚 Sources & Links

Summary

  • Foreigners access ETC via “ETC Tourist Card” or “Japan Expressway Pass” — no permanent residency needed.
  • For 7+ day multi-region trips, JEP 7-day at ¥21,800 pays for itself fast.
  • ETC unlocks 30% late-night, 30% weekend, up to 50% rural commuting discounts.
  • At toll booths: 20 km/h max, confirm card insertion, watch the green light.
  • Urban expressways (Shuto, Hanshin) are NOT covered by JEP — budget separately.
  • Trouble at the gate? Pull to the left, use the yellow intercom — they’ll handle it.

Disclaimer: This article contains affiliate links. Pricing and rules current as of December 2025; verify with NEXCO official sources before traveling.

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