Skip to main content

UK’s potholed roads see insufficient repairs

The UK’s potholed roads are seeing insufficient repairs.
By MJ Woof April 1, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
The UK’s pothole problem continues as insufficient funds are available for effective maintenance – image © courtesy of Mike Woof
The UK has a severe road maintenance problem, due to inconsistent funding, according to a new report from the Asphalt Industry Alliance (AIA). This problem with funding leads to local authorities using quick fixes rather than long term solutions to carry out maintenance and repairs.

The Annual Local Authority Road Maintenance (ALARM) report states that maintaining roads to target conditions is still out of reach for local authorities in England and Wales despite an increase in highway maintenance budgets.

According to the AIA's survey, the legacy of inconsistent funding in England and Wales is preventing highway engineers from being able to provide long term, cost effective maintenance improvements for local roads.

The 26th survey reports a 15% increase in highway maintenance budgets which were, in part, due to additional funding from the UK Government, including the Pothole Fund in England, as well as supplementary funds. However, budgets reported are still lower than they were two years ago, and road conditions have yet to see any significant improvement.

This approach is resulting in wasteful patch and mend repairs as local authorities have a statutory duty to maintain the highway but do not have the funding to implement more cost effective, proactive repairs.

This is borne out by the large increase in the number of potholes filled over the last 12 months in England and Wales, the equivalent of one being filled every 19 seconds. Local authorities also report that, despite the increase in budgets, target road conditions still remain out of reach. If they had enough funds to meet their own targets conditions across all road types, there could be an additional 23,000km of local roads in a good state of repair and another 3,200 fewer km in need of urgent repair.

The AIA says that while extra funding in 2020/21 was welcomed, using it to repeatedly fill in potholes is essentially a failure as it does nothing to improve the resilience of the network. The average frequency of road surfacing is now once every 68 years and the bill to fix the backlog of maintenance work on our local roads in England and Wales remains in excess of £10 billion.

Related Content

  • A pothole damage breakthrough?
    April 11, 2013
    Academic research by two universities in the same UK city shows that patch repairs on potholes could be far more durable if a few simple techniques were consistently used. Guy Woodford reports. Repairing pothole damage to highways and vehicles across Europe costs responsible authorities and individual motorists hundreds of millions of euros each year. Yet it has cost just €20,204 to make the potentially crucial first step in identifying a method of keeping highways across the continent and beyond pothole fr
  • ALARM Survey: UK maintenance backlog continues despite funding boost
    March 23, 2016
    Highways departments in England and Wales have yet to feel the benefit of the UK government’s commitment to spend €7.6 billion (£6 billion) on local road maintenance between 2015 and 2021. In fact, overall road budgets have dropped by 16%, according to the annual Local Authority Road Maintenance (ALARM) survey of highway bosses in England and Wales, conducted by the Asphalt Industry Alliance. This is reflected in the increase in average budget shortfalls – the difference between the money needed to ma
  • UK: cash released for pothole repairs
    February 16, 2021
    UK’s Department of Transport said it takes around £50 (€57 / $69) to fix a pothole.
  • National pothole day for UK
    January 15, 2025
    Today is national pothole day for the UK.