Skip to main content

UK men aged 20-30 most likely to be disqualified from driving, says the IAM

According to new figures obtained by the UK Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM), male drivers between the ages of 20-30 were the most common group to be disqualified from driving in the 12 months between July 2013 and June 2014.
August 8, 2014 Read time: 2 mins

According to new figures obtained by the UK 5125 Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM), male drivers between the ages of 20-30 were the most common group to be disqualified from driving in the 12 months between July 2013 and June 2014.

The figures were supplied by the DVLA (Driver and Vehicle Licencing Agency) following a Freedom of Information request made by the IAM, Britain’s leading road safety charity.

The statistics reveal the age groups most commonly carrying out a driving offence that then lead to a subsequent driving ban.

As of 21 June 2014, a total of 92,136 people across the UK were disqualified from driving between July 2013 and June 2014, and of those about 62,000 are still disqualified.

The age with the greatest number of disqualified drivers is 25 with 3,748 serving a driving ban (3,294 males and 454 females).

Some 31,668 males, just over one-third of the total number of people disqualified from driving during this period, were between the ages of 20-30 with males outnumbering females considerably when it comes to carrying out offences leading to a driving ban. In total 13,481 females were disqualified during this time period, less than 15% of the overall total.

And in the 20-30 age group just 4,333 females were disqualified in the 12-month period, compared to 31,668 males.

While 36,001 people between 20-30 were disqualified in the last 12 months, 10,025 people in their fifties and just 3,874 in their sixties were.

The information supplied to the IAM also shows 230 people under 17, and therefore under the legal driving age for the UK were disqualified, including four 12-year-olds and four 13-year-olds. One 12-year-old girl is currently disqualified before her driving career even starts.

Simon Best, chief executive of the IAM, said: “These statistics strongly reflect the research we have already carried out in this area: that young males are very much the at risk group when it comes to driving safety.

“We believe targeting the attitudes of these drivers specifically, through advanced training for example, should be a major part of future road safety campaigning. Reducing offending in this age bracket would dramatically improve safety on our roads for all road users.

“It is also of great concern that youngsters not even eligible to hold a provisional licence are being banned at such young ages. Parents need to be aware their children are putting their own lives and those of others at huge risk by taking the wheel of a car on public roads.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • IAM says more action needed to cut UK road casualty numbers
    November 1, 2012
    IAM (Institute of Advanced Motorists) director Neil Greig said “much more” needed to be done to sustain an encouraging drop in the latest published quarterly road casualty statistics for the UK. The latest Department for Transport figures revealed 400 people were killed in road accidents in Britain between April-June 2012 – down 18% than the 487 killed over the same period of 2011. The total number of casualties was 47,880 between April-June 2012, a fall of 7% on the 51,580 in Q2 2011.
  • Young motorcycle riders at most risk in Europe
    January 20, 2017
    Young powered two wheelers are most at risk of crashing. That is the key finding of a recent report into powered two wheeler crashes in Europe. The analysis of 9,186 crashes where a motorcyclist was severely injured, shows that specifically young, male riders face a significant risk to become a road traffic victim. The European Commission recently published the ‘Study on serious road traffic injuries in the EU’ to collate data that could in the future prevent serious road traffic injuries. The aim was to
  • Concerns for young drivers causing crashes
    May 24, 2016
    Concern is being expressed for the safety of young drivers. Statistics both from the US and the UK reveal the shockingly high risk of young drivers being involved in crashes. They also reveal that young drivers are a danger not only to themselves, but to other road users as well as the occupants of their own vehicles. The latest figures from the UK show that 2,088 young drivers and passengers aged from 17-24 were killed and seriously injured in just one year. Although the data shows that drivers aged fro
  • IAM welcomes drop in UK road deaths, but concerned over drink-drive casualties
    August 2, 2013
    The Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM), Britain’s largest independent road safety charity, has welcomed new UK Department for Transport (DfT) road casualty figures showing a fall in the amount of people killed or seriously injured in road accidents. The DfT reports there were 1, 680 people killed in the year ending March 2013, 10% reduction from 1, 870 in the year ending March 2012. The number of people killed or seriously injured also fell to 23, 660, a 6% decrease.