06/30/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/30/2026 03:30
Today, the Council and the European Parliament reached a provisional agreement on targeted amendments to the Eurovignette directive, which sets the framework for road tolls and user charges for heavy-duty vehicles across the European Union. The agreement strengthens legal certainty, simplifies implementation and ensures the consistent application of CO₂-based charging rules in light of the new CO₂ emission standards for heavy-duty vehicles that will apply from 1 July 2026.
This agreement delivers the legal certainty that transport operators, tolling authorities and service providers need in connection to the expanded application of the new CO₂ standards for heavy-duty vehicles. By clarifying key provisions of the Eurovignette directive, we are ensuring a smoother and more harmonised implementation across the European Union. Over the past six months the Cyprus Presidency has delivered concrete results for Europe's transport network that is more competitive, more resilient, and more sustainable for the future.
Alexis Vafeades, Minister of transport, communications and works of the Republic of Cyprus
The amendments provide greater clarity for hauliers, national authorities and toll service providers on how the Eurovignette rules should be applied to different vehicle categories and emission classes. This will facilitate a smooth transition to a road charging system that better reflects vehicle emissions while ensuring more harmonised implementation across member states.
The new CO₂ emission standards for heavy-duty vehicles have direct implications for the classification of vehicles under the Eurovignette framework. The agreed amendments provide legal and technical clarifications to ensure the effective interaction of the two legislative frameworks.
The provisional agreement:
The co-legislators decided not to retain the proposed system of road charge variation for heavy-duty vehicles towing more sustainable trailers. They considered that such a scheme would create additional administrative burdens, increase the complexity of tolling systems, affect the rollout and enforcement of electronic toll services. At the same time, the Commission has been requested to evaluate the persisting obstacles.
The provisional agreement will now have to be endorsed by the Council and the Parliament. It will then be formally adopted by both institutions following legal-linguistic revision.