Skip to main content

UK: cash released for pothole repairs

UK’s Department of Transport said it takes around £50 (€57 / $69) to fix a pothole.
By David Arminas February 16, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
One of 10 million potholes in the UK

The UK government has released another tranche of £500 million (€573.4 million / US$693.5 million) under its five-year plan to repair potholes in England.

The money is the second such instalment from the UK Department of Transport’s £2.5 billion (€2.87 billion / $3.48 billion) Potholes Fund to be handed out to English county councils between 2020/21 and 2024/25.

The department said on average it takes around £50 (€57 / $69) to fix a pothole and there are around 10 million potholes to be repaired.

The latest instalment is part of wider funding the department is providing for road maintenance, totalling more than £1.1 billion (€1.26 billion / $1.53 billion) across England in 2021/22.

“Potholes are a symptom of an under-appreciated and underfunded network,” said Rick Green, chairman of the UK’s Asphalt Industry Alliance, a partnership of Mineral Products Association and Eurobitume UK – part of Eurobitume, the Brussels-based European Association of Bitumen Producers.

“To keep essential services across the country moving and looking to recovery post-COVID, what’s needed is further sustained investment in effective road maintenance. That will help improve the condition of our local roads to prevent potholes from forming in the first place.”

He noted that last year the alliance’s Annual Local Authority Road Maintenance (ALARM) Survey 2020 reported that it would now cost £11.2 billion (€12.8 billion / $15.5 billion) to bring our roads up to scratch – up from £9.31 billion (€10.7 billion / $13 billion) the year before.

“While cash-strapped local authorities will no doubt welcome this year’s allocation from the Pothole Fund, it is still a fraction of the amount that’s needed and will not address deteriorating conditions and the rising bill to put it right,” said Green.  

 

Related Content

  • Advances in bitumen technology: new applications
    February 16, 2022
    This month, we look at four very different pavement technologies in four very different applications
  • Safety rallying call to English councillors after road death rise
    July 9, 2012
    English councils have been urged to protect the public on the roads by “whatever means is appropriate” after the first rise in road deaths in the country for eight years. Professor Stephen Glaister, director of the RAC Foundation, said data obtained by the Foundation under the Freedom of Information Act (FOI) showed there had been “no mass switch off” of speed cameras in England despite two years of Government road safety funding cuts. But Glaister fears an ageing national network of existing speed camera
  • Drop in US road deaths for 2024
    May 23, 2025
    The US has seen a drop in road deaths and a road safety improvement for 2024.
  • Western nations need to maintain roadway assets
    December 23, 2014
    In the western world, drivers have benefited over many years from road and highway networks connecting not just towns and cities, but remote rural areas also. The US Interstate network in particular shows how major investment in infrastructure can help fuel economic growth. Construction of the Interstate system commenced in 1956, with the new highways that were built and the transportation they provided contributing greatly to the economic power of the US ever since. In Western Europe too, highway links pro