Skip to main content

San Francisco set to introduce speed enforcement cameras in 2025

They will be in 33 locations from early next year as part of bid to reduce collisions in city
By Adam Hill March 15, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The streets of San Francisco... with added enforcement cameras next year (© Michael Vi | Dreamstime.com)

San Francisco is to install automated speed enforcement cameras for the first time in 2025.

San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA) says they will be introduced at 33 locations on city-owned streets (as opposed to freeways or state-owned roads), following an analysis of speeding hotspots.

More than 70 locations were identified, with a concentration on locations with the highest percentage of vehicles traveling 10mph or more over the posted speed limit. 

The cameras will therefore be distributed along San Francisco’s High Injury Network (HIN) "with at least two cameras in each Supervisor’s district and at many key freeway touchdown points in the city", SFMTA says.

HIN is the 12% of city streets that account for 68% of San Francisco's serious and fatal roadway injuries. The team identified locations near schools, senior service centres, parks and areas with high pedestrian activity - and found blocks there which are suitable for speed cameras, with clear sight lines and existing mid-block streetlight poles owned by the city. 

The cameras will enforce lower speeds outside eight school sites, 12 parks, 11 social service sites serving seniors and people with disabilities and 12 neighbourhood commercial districts where many people walk or bike.

In 2023, the California State Legislature passed Assembly Bill 645, which authorised six cities, including San Francisco, to pilot the cameras for five years.

AB 645 sets 11mph or more as the speeding threshold that speed safety cameras will target. By law, there are three stipulations on where the cameras can be installed: if the street were previously designated a safety corridor with a high proportion of injury-related crashes; or has a high number of vehicle racing incidents; or is in a school zone.

Among next steps, SFMTA says it has to find a camera vendor, finalise the citation process, and build a community education and awareness campaign.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Alstom to provide VMI services to San Francisco
    January 7, 2019
    Alstom is to supply vendor managed inventory (VMI) services to the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA) over three years to help improve passenger safety. The €50 million contract includes two-year exercisable two-year options. The deal serves as an extension to a 2013 agreement. Alstom says VMI has allowed SFTMA to carry out regular and predictive maintenance of its fleet as well as decrease inventory management costs and increase daily average car availability by 20% and mean distan
  • Data exploits parking potential
    March 11, 2015
    David Crawford parallel parks with innovations in two continents. Surveys of US cities indicate that drivers searching for parking can account for up to 37% of all urban traffic congestion. A 2011 study by IBM of 20 cities around the world found that nearly six out of ten drivers had abandoned their search for a parking space at least once; while motorists generally spent on average 20 minutes looking for a sought-after spot.
  • Transit in a time of protest
    July 13, 2020
    Street demonstrations at times create tricky balancing acts for public transportation providers - and the recent Black Lives Matter protests have also put a spotlight on the deeper problem of ‘infrastructural racism’…
  • Audit finds red light cameras make intersections safer
    July 24, 2015
    An audit carried out by the Portland, Oregon, City Auditor’s office found that crash rates at red light camera intersections in the city were lower than before the cameras were installed and were also lower than at most dangerous intersections without cameras. The City of Portland uses 11 cameras at 10 intersections to enforce laws against red-light running and to improve safety. The Police Bureau operates the red light camera program and oversees a vendor who owns the cameras and issues citations once the