The four crossings from New Jersey to New York State are the Lincoln Tunnel, Holland Tunnel, George Washington Bridge, and Bayonne Bridge.
All of these crossings connect New Jersey to New York City: the first three connect New Jersey to Manhattan, and the Bayonne Bridge connects New Jersey to Staten Island. There are no crossings that connect New Jersey to points in New York State that are outside the New York City limits.
The toll for cars on all four of these crossings is the same:
During peak hours (weekdays 6 to 9 AM and 4 to 7 PM, and weekends noon to 8 PM) the toll is $8 with E-ZPass.
During non-peak hours, the toll is $6 with E-ZPass.
Without E-ZPass, there is an $8 toll at all times.
Also note that these tolls apply only to vehicles heading from New Jersey to New York. There is NO toll for vehicles heading from New York to New Jersey.
No, you will have to pay a toll to cross the Hudson River, unless you go ridiculously far out of your way. The good news is, there's no toll on the way back.
Missing a toll in New Jersey will result in possible fines. Depending on the toll, a charge of $50.00 will be assessed as well as the toll charge.
If you lost your ticket for the New Jersey toll they will charge you the full amount instead of just the portions toll.
Toll costs from new jersey to Delaware
700,000,000,000,000.O1
how much does it cost in toll from woodbridge va to detroit
Using the main roads, what will be the approximate cost of toll charges from Virginia to New York - JFK airport? I propose driving from VA to NY along I-95, then the New Jersey Turnpike to NY.
The new Jersey plan and the Virginia plan
No not all states, Illinois,Virginia, west Virginia, Pennsylvania, new jersey, new York, Texas, fl, Indiana, Maryland, just about all the states on the north east
Virginia is by far the larger: Virginia's area is 42,774 sq miles, and New Jersey's is 8,721.
The New Jersey plan (APEX)
William Patterson introduced the resolution. It is not clear if he wrote it on his own.