NC Quick Pass Review
NC Quick Pass Review – Extremely Frustrating & Unfair Experience
I am honestly still in shock at how NC Quick Pass handled my situation. It feels like the system protects criminals instead of victims.
Here is what happened:
I owned a vehicle that was no longer in my possession and was located elsewhere. Unknown to me, that vehicle was somehow sold to Pull-A-Part. At the time, the tag associated with that vehicle had already expired.
Later, I received a bill from NC Quick Pass for nearly $800 in toll charges. When I reviewed the charges online, I immediately noticed something alarming—the vehicle shown in the toll images was a Chevrolet, which is NOT the car I own.
This clearly means someone else was using my tag.
While this person continued to illegally use my tag in the toll lanes, they racked up over $1,400 in charges. I followed the proper steps:
Contacted the South Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles
Reported the tag as stolen
Filed two police reports (one for the vehicle location and one for tag recovery)
Despite providing all of this documentation, NC Quick Pass responded that:
Because the tag was not reported stolen until 03/09/2026,
I am still responsible for tolls going back to 01/21/2026
They only waived a small portion ($161.40) after the report date and a $6 fee—but still expect me to pay $1,217.30.
Let me be clear:
The tag was stolen
The vehicle in the photos is NOT mine
Someone else committed the violation
And they even have identifying information for the person responsible
Yet somehow, I am the one being held financially responsible.
This is not just frustrating—it’s unjust.
It does not matter that the tag was stolen.
It does not matter that the car in the images is wrong.
Apparently, all that matters is billing the person tied to the plate.
How does this make sense?
This experience has shown me that NC Quick Pass policies need serious review. Victims of tag theft should not be treated like the offenders.








