Skip to main content

One in seven UK drivers admit to having sex while driving

A UK survey, commissioned by car leasing specialist OSV, has found that almost one in seven drivers admitted to sexual activity when behind the wheel of a vehicle. Men were more willing to admit to this indiscretion than women: 60% of those that admitted to participating in a sexual activity were men, while only 40% of those that confessed were women. Around 60% of those who admitted to sexual activity during driving were between the ages of 30-59 while 30% were between the ages of 18-29. Only 10% of
October 29, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Naughty boy
A UK survey, commissioned by car leasing specialist OSV, has found that almost one in seven drivers admitted to sexual activity when behind the wheel of a vehicle.

Men were more willing to admit to this indiscretion than women: 60% of those that admitted to participating in a sexual activity were men, while only 40% of those that confessed were women.

Around 60% of those who admitted to sexual activity during driving were between the ages of 30-59 while 30% were between the ages of 18-29. Only 10% of those owning up were over the age of 60.
 
However, sexual activities was not top of the list of admissions; it was second. ‘Picking your nose’ was top, with 40% of respondents saying they had done so.

Other dangerous admissions include checking social media (10%), taking a ‘selfie’ photo (4%), driving naked (2%) and eating with utensils (2%).
 
Co-founder of OSV, Debbie Kirkley, said the survey “helps lift the lid” on what people get up to while driving. “It is deeply worrying that so many people admit to taking part in these dangerous activities. More needs to be done to help highlight and educate people about the dangers,” she said.

A US survey in June 2014 found similar discrepancies between what men and women would admit to while driving. The Accident Analysis and Prevention report found 9.3% of women admitted to having full or partial sex while driving – at up to 130kph.

The number was higher for men, with almost a third engaging in sexual activity behind the wheel.

The US study was taken from a sample of 195 male and 511 female college students at a Midwestern university who took part in an online study about having sex while driving. One driver said he was able to keep control because his passenger straddled him facing frontwards and held the wheel.

Common driving errors reported included speeding (nearly 38%), drifting into another lane, (36%) and letting go of the steering wheel (almost 11%).

Researchers at the University of South Dakota said sex-related crashes were under-reported because couple were too embarrassed.

Related Content

  • VIDEO: Get me to the church on time, and fast
    November 12, 2015
    God willing, two nuns in northern Slovakia caught on camera speeding managed to get home, or to the church, safely and on time. The sister, accompanied by another nun, was pushing her Skoda Fabia with religious conviction to around 160kph, or 100mph. However, they haven’t been the fastest nuns around Europe in recent years. In 2009, a nun in Italy, near Turin, was stopped by police for nudging upwards of 180kph – 110mph. The UK’s Daily Mail newspaper reported at the time that “demon driver Sister T
  • Learner driver
    February 22, 2012
    Regular readers of this page in World Highways will be familiar with a South Korean market trader who has clocked a record number of attempts at passing a driving test. The woman has finally passed after 950 attempts, having taken the written exam on a near-daily basis since April 2005. Although this written test requires a 60% pass mark she had repeatedly scored 30-50%. However, the 68 year old grandmother still needs to get behind the wheel to pass the practical portion of the test before being allowed a
  • Help is on the way: RoadResource.org
    November 29, 2018
    RoadResource.org as a go-to website for surfacing information is now live, explains Doug Hogue, of VSS Macropaver When RoadResouce.org went live – quietly - in July it was the end of two years of hard work by three US associations for pavement preservation. But there was no grand party or ceremonial pushing of the “go live” button, says Doug Hogue, vice president and general manager of VSS Macropaver. “For all of us in the industry July is a busy period that left little time to celebrate on the ope
  • AEM’s 2050 Vision winner combines road and rail
    March 9, 2017
    Five finalists for the Association of Equipment Manufacturer’s (AEM’s) Infrastructure Vision 2050 Challenge fought for the winning place in a live final, held at CONEXPO-CON/AGG’s Tech Experience zone. The finalists had to pitch their ideas to three judges in one of the white Tech Experience domes.