Skip to main content

How British drivers compare in European responsible driving survey

With 16 million UK motorists set to take to the roads this Easter weekend, a new European survey finds that risky driving habits and failure to respect the rules are on the increase. The annual survey carried out for Vinci Autoroutes Foundation for Responsible Driving by IPSOS examined the behaviour of drivers from ten European countries. Each year, this survey draws up an inventory of driving practices and trends, allowing closer targeting of methods to prevent irresponsible driving and promote safer ro
April 2, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
With 16 million UK motorists set to take to the roads this Easter weekend, a new European survey finds that risky driving habits and failure to respect the rules are on the increase.

The annual survey carried out for 5973 Vinci Autoroutes Foundation for Responsible Driving by IPSOS examined the behaviour of drivers from ten European countries. Each year, this survey draws up an inventory of driving practices and trends, allowing closer targeting of methods to prevent irresponsible driving and promote safer roads.

The survey results found that European drivers persist in engaging in risky driving behaviour, including going above the legal speed limit, using mobile phones and forgetting to wear their seatbelt. Survey results also indicate that while drivers tend to be satisfied with their own behaviour behind the wheel, they are very critical of their European neighbours.

Europeans are currently less optimistic that number of fatal road accidents will decline than they were in 2014. Only 55 per cent of respondents polled believe that the number of people killed in traffic accidents will continue to decline significantly in coming years (61 per cent in 2014).

Overall, 62 per cent of European drivers believe that driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs is the main cause of fatal road accidents, but 12 per cent of the respondents admit they would take to the wheel despite having exceeded the authorised alcohol limit.

In contrast to the overall results, 59 per cent of UK drivers believed that not paying attention, for example using a mobile phone while driving, is the main cause of fatal road accidents, followed by driving under the influence of alcohol or narcotics (46 per cent), speeding (46 per cent) and drowsiness (five per cent).

42 per cent of UK motorists considered sending text messages while driving to be significantly more risky than respondents in nine other European countries.

Nine out of ten Europeans admitted exceeding the speed limit by a few miles per hour, a practice that increased in all countries polled in 2014, notably UK  (92 per cent, +3 points) Sweden (95 per cent, +8 points) and Belgium (94 per cent, +8 points).

Europeans surveyed said that the most responsible drivers are from Sweden, followed by Germany, UK and the Netherlands. The least responsible drivers are from Italy, Greece and Poland.

Responding to the results of the survey, Neil Greig, 6187 Institute of Advanced Motorists’ director of policy and research said, "Drivers are right to be pessimistic about road safety. After many years of falls 2014 looks likely to deliver an increase in deaths on the road. The survey is also correct to highlight behaviour issues as the biggest problem. They can only be addressed by overhauling how we teach new drivers and encouraging a continuing personal development approach to driving skills."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Danish study shows higher speed limits are safer
    February 25, 2014
    A two-year experiment by the Danish road directorate shows accidents have fallen on single-carriageway rural roads and motorways where the speed limit was raised. Since the speed limit on some stretches of two-way rural roads was increased from 80 to 90 km/h, accidents have decreased due to a reduction in the speed differential between the slowest and fastest cars, resulting in less overtaking. The slowest drivers have increased their speeds, but the fastest 15 per cent drive one km/h slower on average
  • Urgent action needed as drink-drive figures stall, says Brake
    August 5, 2016
    UK road safety charity Brake is calling on the government to take urgent action after figures released by the Department for Transport (DfT) show little change in the number of people killed because of drink-driving. Government figures reveal that the number of deaths involving a driver under the influence of alcohol was 240 in 2014. That figure has been consistently been reported since 2010 and looks set to continue if the provisional estimate for the 2015 figures proves to be accurate (200-290 killed).
  • Positive results for New South Wales camera enforcement
    July 20, 2016
    The New South Wales government’s 2015 speed camera review shows that speed cameras continue to deliver positive road safety benefits, say the report’s authors. Overall, the trend in road fatalities and annual speed surveys shows that the mobile speed camera program continues to deliver positive road safety benefits, compared with results before the reintroduction of the mobile speed camera program in 2010. The 2014 road toll of 307 fatalities on NSW roads is the lowest annual figure since 1923. This i
  • Make traffic policing and casualty reduction a priority, says charity
    April 29, 2015
    A report released this week by road safety charity Brake and Direct Line has revealed that nearly half of UK drivers (49 per cent) admit to breaking traffic laws. Of those, half say they do so through inattention, while the other half admit to doing so deliberately, because they think they can get away with it or do not agree with the laws. When asked what unsafe driving behaviour they witnessed most, 71 per cent cited distraction such as from mobile phones, followed by tailgating speeding (67 per ce