Agency Dispute Guide

How to Dispute a E-ZPass Charge — Complete Guide

The largest electronic toll network in the US, covering roughly 19 states across the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, and Midwest. Here is everything you need to know to dispute a charge, from the required documentation to exactly what to write.

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TL;DR — How to Dispute a E-ZPass Charge

To dispute a E-ZPass toll charge: act before the deadline on your notice, gather documentation supporting your grounds (transponder account statement, bill of sale, rental agreement, or evidence of a plate misread), and submit a written dispute letter citing the notice number, plate, violation date, and your specific reason. E-ZPass reviews disputes and can dismiss the charge, reduce it to the base toll rate, or waive penalty fees for first-time violations. DisputeMyToll.com generates this letter automatically.

ContactVaries by state — NY: 1-800-333-8655 · NJ: 1-888-288-6865 · PA: 1-877-736-6727

How E-ZPass Disputes Work

E-ZPass is run independently by each member state, so disputes go to the specific state agency on your notice. Submit a written explanation with documentation — a bill of sale, police report, or proof of a valid, funded transponder. Misreads on a valid account are commonly adjusted to the E-ZPass rate.

Acting promptly is critical — once a E-ZPass charge escalates past the first notice, administrative fees are added on top of the original toll, and continued inaction can trigger vehicle registration holds or referral to collections. Filing a written dispute pauses that escalation while your case is under review, which is one of the strongest reasons to dispute in writing rather than simply paying an incorrect bill.

Valid Reasons to Dispute a E-ZPass Toll

How to Dispute a E-ZPass Charge Step by Step

  1. Locate the deadline on your E-ZPass notice. Most agencies allow 30 days from the notice date — act well before that window closes.
  2. Gather your documentation: your E-ZPass or transponder account statement, vehicle registration, bill of sale, rental agreement, or any other proof supporting your grounds.
  3. Write a dispute letter. Include your name, address, phone, plate number, the notice or invoice number, the violation date, and a clear statement of your dispute grounds. Be specific and factual.
  4. Submit by certified mail with return receipt so you have dated proof of filing, or use E-ZPass's online portal and save the confirmation number.
  5. Follow up if you receive no response within 45 days. Reference your original dispute date and confirmation in the follow-up.

What Happens After You File with E-ZPass

After your E-ZPass dispute is received, the agency reviews the toll image, your account records, and your submitted documentation. Most decisions arrive within 30 to 90 days. During active review, late fees typically stop accruing and collection activity is paused. Keep the confirmation of your submission — it is your proof that you filed on time if any question arises later.

If E-ZPass approves your dispute, the charge is dismissed or reduced and any related administrative fees are typically removed. If your dispute is denied, you usually still have the right to request a formal hearing, pay the base toll while contesting the fees, or submit additional evidence. A denial is not the end of the process — it is the beginning of the escalation ladder that DisputeMyToll.com also helps you navigate.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Why did I get an E-ZPass violation if I have an account?

Usually the transponder wasn't read or the payment method on file failed. Include your account number and statement to have it corrected.

Can I dispute E-ZPass late fees?

Yes — many member agencies waive the first late fee if you pay the base toll and update your account.

Related Free Tools: ContestMyBill.com • FightMyParking.com • ReviewMyDocs.com

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