Skip to main content

The cycle of potholes in the UK

Since 2015 almost a million potholes have been recorded annually by UK local authorities, with the 2016 count reaching 1,088,965, according to an insurance provider.
October 1, 2019 Read time: 3 mins
Personal and dental injuries to cyclists accounted for around 55 of the total 335 pothole damage and injury claims filed against local authorities during 2017-18

The Insurance Emporium obtained data from 175 local authorities and compared it to the incidence of injury and damage claims made against these authorities by cyclists.

During 2017-18, there were 335 pothole damage and injury claims filed against local authorities.

Personal and dental injuries to cyclists accounted for 16% of these and damage to the bike 26%. The chances of successfully claiming for damage or injury after hitting a pothole appeared very low however, with just 9% prevailing.

Cheshire East Council had the highest overall number of claims made against it - 46 since 2015. Hampshire County Council was next highest at 37. Manchester City Council and London’s Tower Hamlets Council came third highest with 30 claims each.

The City of Edinburgh Council was UK’s overall pothole capital, with 73 potholes per km of road being reported on average from January 2015 to April 2018. London and Greater London had low pothole numbers as did several small islands such as the Isles of Scilly and Shetland.

“Potholes are not an inevitable fact of life,” said professor Nicholas Thom of England’s Nottingham University. “They are caused by water that gets into the road surface and is then squeezed by the action of high tyre pressures, made worse by freezing and thawing. Very impermeable surfaces, such as hot rolled asphalt, are extremely pothole resistant but they are more expensive and less nice to drive on.”

Meanwhile, more permeable surfaces, as permitted by Highways England [the government agency managing roads in England only] and most local authorities, are cheaper and nicer to drive on – until they fall apart and form potholes. “So the number of potholes per kilometre on a given authority’s roads depends not only on the repair budget, repair strategy and the climate (frosts) but on a historical policy choice - what surfacing materials to use. It is a choice that badly needs to be reviewed,” said Thom.

The report comes as the UK’s department of Transport is considering whether road contractors and utilities companies should be guaranteeing roads to be pothole-free for five years. At the moment, the guarantee is two years but the Department for Transport is conducting an eight-week public consultation on the subject.

Street Works UK, which represents the utilities sector, argues that an increase is not needed. The department is also seeking more innovation in how to better repair potholes, such as using asphalt with a higher bitumen content. Last October the UK government promised local authorities in England an extra US$546 million to repair damaged roads and to keep bridges safe.

The UK’s Asphalt Industry Alliance, many of whose members repair potholes, has claimed that one in five local roads in England and Wales is in a poor condition. The groups also says that more than $10 billion is needed to make the repairs.

 

Related Content

  • Riding the sustainable cycle
    October 5, 2020
    It’s taken a while in North America, but “vehicular cycling” has been replaced by “sustainable cycling”, says transportation engineer Tyler Golly.
  • Yotta’s Horizons and Mayrise create a route map of the world
    September 14, 2016
    Simon Topp, director of international business at software developer Yotta, explained the need for having the best possible plan in place. Highways agencies and departments the world over face a raft of complex and difficult challenges when it comes to managing and maintaining their infrastructure assets. In some countries, where natural disasters or extreme weather events are endemic, good asset management will need to be supplemented by risk and resilience planning. In the US, for example, the Feder
  • Drink driving concern for Europe
    November 24, 2015
    Drink drive enforcement still has issues in Europe, according to Pan-European police body TISPOL. It is estimated that 230 (14%) of the 1,713 road deaths in the UK are due to drinking and driving. Meanwhile drink driving is the cause of around 5,000 road deaths in Europe. For England, Wales and Northern Ireland the limit for driving is still 80mg (0.8) of alcohol/100ml of blood. Scotland reduced its limit to 50mg (0.5) of alcohol/100ml of blood in December 2014, bringing it into line with most other Europea
  • TISPOL: drink driving continues to be a pan-European concern
    January 18, 2016
    Drink-drive enforcement still has issues in Europe, according to pan-European police body TISPOL Drink-driving is the cause of around 5,000 road deaths in Europe. In the UK alone, it is estimated that 230 (14%) of the country’s 1,713 road deaths are due to drinking and driving. For England, Wales and Northern Ireland the limit for driving is still 80mg (0.8) of alcohol/100ml of blood. Scotland reduced its limit to 50mg (0.5) of alcohol/100ml of blood in December 2014, bringing it into line with most