Vehicle finance provider Moneybarn has analysed the latest government data* to reveal which UK areas have the highest number of motoring offences and which offences are the most common.

Motoring offences include but are not limited to speeding, careless driving, not wearing a seat belt, use of hand-held devices and insurance offences. They are categorised as either minor or major and come with their own set of penalties, ranging from an on-the-spot fine to points on your licence or even a prison sentence for the most severe offences.

London Metropolitan drivers received the largest number of fixed penalty notices (FPNS) for motoring offences (233,782) – the equivalent of 640 notices issued each day. West Yorkshire (198,188) and Avon and Somerset (162,726) followed closely, in second and third places respectively.

 

Area

Highest number of FPNs

#

Area

Lowest number of FPNs

London Metropolitan

233,782

1

Gwent

1,874

West Yorkshire

198,188

2

Wiltshire

2,605

Avon and Somerset

162,726

3

Dyfed Powys

2,851

Thames Valley

153,197

4

Cleveland

13,396

Essex

122,871

5

Derbyshire

14,433

Greater Manchester

118,550

6

City of London

14,565

Norfolk

109,189

7

Durham

20,582

West Mercia

97,357

8

Northern Ireland

20,968

Surrey

97,313

9

North Wales

23,645

Lancashire

83,865

10

Gloucestershire

25,489

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Speeding offences (144,126) were the main contributing factor to London Metropolitan’s high number of FPNs. Followed by ‘neglect of traffic direction’ offences (34,674) and insurance offences (20,588).

Motoring offences have long been a problem in London, with local police forces regularly implementing new strategies to tackle road danger and enforce its traffic laws. For example, the Vision Zero action plan in 2018 and the Metropolitan Police’s recent Road Crimes Team, launched in March and aimed at tackling London’s most dangerous drivers.

However, despite receiving over 144,000 speeding tickets, motorists from the London Metropolitan area posted only the fourth-worst results across the UK. West Yorkshire posted the highest number of speeding offences in the UK with 181,864, followed by Avon and Somerset (159,210) and Thames Valley (145,447).

Following previous successful safe driving campaigns and to try and tackle the issue of speeding across its cities, West Yorkshire Police will be carrying out increased enforcement activity on its roads, specifically to areas where speeding is a problem.

In contrast, Welsh police force areas dominate the bottom 10 for the lowest number of FPNs issued for motoring offences, with Gwent, Dyfed Powys and North Wales all featuring. County Gwent drivers’ triumph, with just 1,874 FPNs issued overall.

Gwent drivers received low numbers of FPNs across most motoring offences, noise offences (2), vehicle registration offences (55) and seat belt offences (125).

Wiltshire (2,605) and Dyfed Powys (2,851) also feature among the police force areas with the lowest numbers of FPNs issued, in second and third places.

Northern Ireland (20,968) also features in the bottom 10 areas with the lowest number of FPNs issued due to motoring offences. However, driving without insurance is the number one motoring offence in Northern Ireland, with over 8,500 FPNs issued as a result.

Offence type

Total number of FPNs issued

Speeding

2,386,672

Neglect of Traffic Direction

98,092

Insurance

74,599

Seat Belt

54,725

Test

43,646

Use of hand-held mobile

40,946

Careless driving

21,653

Vehicle Registration

12,225

Noise

579

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

When analysing the number of offences across all areas Moneybarn found that speeding is the number one offence in the UK, with over 2.3 million FPNs issued.

 

Only recently, drivers were caught clocking speeds up to 163mph, proving more needs to be done to tackle speeding on UK roads.

However, steps are being taken to tackle speeding, with local police force areas recently launching a three-week campaign targeting speeding drivers in a bid to keep vulnerable road users, including cyclists, safe.

‘Neglect of traffic direction’ followed in second place, with over 98,000 FPNs issued as a result of drivers failing to comply with traffic directions. This is becoming increasingly concerning, especially as it’s reported only one in ten motorists understand basic UK road traffic signs.

Insurance (74,599), seat belt (54,725) and test offences (43,646) complete the top five motoring offences with the highest number of FPNs issued.

Tim Schwarz, Head of Marketing at Moneybarn, commented on the findings:

It’s always surprising to see such a high number of UK motorists receiving driving fines, despite the government’s efforts to implement stricter penalties for offending drivers.

“It’s clear more needs to be done by the relevant authorities to bring these numbers down. However, motorists can also play their part in tackling dangerous driving by reporting any incidents they see to their local authorities.”

To find out more, you can find the full data analysis here