Skip to main content

Welsh default 20mph limit leads to 4mph drop in driver speed

Transport for Wales' preliminary figures show average reduction in first three months
By Adam Hill February 22, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
Average speeds dropped from 28.9mph to 24.8mph (© Chrissnape30 | Dreamstime.com)

The 20mph default speed limit in built-up areas of Wales, introduced in September last year, has led to a fall in drivers' speed, according to Transport for Wales.

Data over the first three months shows 'weighted mean' speeds (that is, average speeds when differences for traffic volumes are taken into account) on a sample of main restricted roads in Wales dropped by an average of 4mph: 24.8mph instead of 28.9mph.

While there has been opposition to the limit, Transport for Wales says it expected this behaviour change from drivers.

A Task Force Group report said in 2020: “There is overwhelming evidence that lower speeds result in fewer collisions and a reduced severity of injuries; and consistent evidence that casualties are reduced when 20mph limits are introduced. It should be noted that these benefits are achieved even when average speeds do not drop to 20mph - any speed reduction leads to a positive outcome. Speed reductions are expected to increase over time as people become accustomed to the lower limits and slower driving is normalised.”

Operation Ugain, the police-led motorist engagement campaign, also published this month, shows that most vehicles are driving below the current enforcement threshold.

Figures from the first areas that implemented 20mph, prior to the national roll-out, show that 65% of vehicles monitored were travelling 24mph or under, compared to 50% prior to introduction of 20mph. Those travelling at the highest speeds also reduced by an average of 3mph, the government says.

Lee Waters, Wales deputy minister for climate change, says: "As a result, we can expect fewer collisions, fewer deaths and fewer severe injuries. Reducing harm and reducing the impact on the NHS and other emergency services."

Waters continued: "There is international evidence of strong links between lowering speeds and decreasing the number of collisions and people killed or injured from them. For example, research undertaken by the Transport Research Laboratory in 2000 shows that for urban roads with low average speeds, there is an average 6% reduction in collisions with each 1mph reduction in average speed."

Pedestrians are around five times more likely to be killed when hit by a vehicle travelling at 30mph than a vehicle travelling at 20mph.

Waters said the speed of vehicles is one of the main reasons why people do not walk or cycle more or let their children do so: "Lowering speeds in our built-up communities, can therefore contribute to better and safer environments for active travel, which in turn has significant public health benefits."

People who feel 20mph has been wrongly applied to a particular road should let their local council or highway authority know, Waters added.

"There appear to have been some inconsistences in the ways highway authorities have applied our guidance to make exceptions – that is, to change the speed limit on some roads from the default 20mph back to 30mph."

Experts have reviewed this issue and key recommendations in their report include: expanding and clarification of the exceptions guidance to help Highway Authorities take into account local context more fully and to provide a broader context of guidance on all speed limits in settlements, not just those subject to the default.

The Review Team also suggest training for highway authority officers should be developed to support them in interpreting and applying the guidance; and that legal advice should be sought on the potential liability of highway authorities when making exceptions to the default 20mph limit.

Related Content

  • Changing driving conditions need ongoing driver training
    January 23, 2012
    Trevor Ellis, chairman of the ITS UK Enforcement Interest Group, considers the role of ongoing driver training in increasing compliance. It is over 30 years since I passed my driving test. The world was quite a different place then, in that there were only half the vehicles there are now on the UK's roads, mobile phones did not really exist and (in the UK at least) the vast majority of us drove cars which by today's standards exhibited dreadful dynamic stability and were woefully underpowered.
  • New South Wales removes speed cameras
    October 3, 2014
    New South Wales Minister for Roads and Freight, Duncan Gay, has announced that speed cameras in ten locations across NSW are to be removed as soon as any safety works such as additional signage, barriers and markings and that work has been finished. Gay said in a statement that the government is keeping to a statement that it made while in opposition, and removing any speed cameras that did not add a proven safety benefit. The 2014 Speed Camera Review of the state’s cameras indicates that early result
  • Latest A9 speed camera report ‘shows improvement in driver behaviour’
    July 28, 2015
    The latest performance data for A9 speed camera system has been published by Transport Scotland on behalf of the A9 Safety Group, covering the period May 2015 to July 2015 (incidents are quarter two April to June) as an overall assessment of the performance of the route. The report incorporates the first information in relation to collision and casualty figures covering the period from October 2014 to March 2015, which are reported against the average of the equivalent months in the preceding three year
  • Siemens influences congestion reduction
    March 12, 2021
    When it comes to reducing congestion, even relatively small interventions can have significant and positive knock-on effects, suggests Steve O’Sullivan of Siemens Mobility