The state of UK roads is “miserable”, a motoring services chief has said, as vehicle breakdowns rose by 9% in the last year due to potholes, new figures have suggested.
The RAC reported some 27,205 callouts to breakdowns due to poor road surfaces received in the year to the end of March.
That compares to 24,906 during the previous 12 months, the RAC said.
Pothole-related calls were down by 22% in the first three months this year compared with the same period in 2023, but RAC said this was due to milder weather rather than new roads reducing the damage.
The impact of hitting a pothole can damage a vehicle’s suspension affecting important components like shock absorbers, springs and ball joints, resulting in poorer handling and uneven tyre wear.
What makes a pothole?
Potholes are formed in multiple stages, beginning with the cracking of the road surface due to age, poor drainage and utility works among other reasons.
Water enters the surface and, in winter, ice can seep through the cracks as the roads become too cold.
As traffic continuously pounds the roads, small blocks of asphalt are flicked out.
The final nail in the tarmac is water ponding – where rain floods an already-formed hole – which expands and deepens it.
The UK is burdened with potholes due to high traffic levels and its cold and wet climate during winter months.
Dodging ‘pothole bullets’
RAC head of policy Simon Williams acknowledged the lower callouts during the first three months but said it was “important not to lose sight of the bigger picture and the ongoing miserable state of our roads”.
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Referring to RAC analysis, Mr Williams said drivers are now twice as likely to suffer a breakdown due to “sub-standard road surfaces” compared to 2006.
He added: “While many would rightly say the roads are terrible, we believe they would have been far worse had we not had such a mild winter.
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“We feel drivers have dodged the pothole bullet as the lack of widespread sub-zero temperatures has masked the true state of our roads.”
A Department for Transport spokesperson said: “Local highway authorities are responsible for maintaining their road networks, but we are supporting them with £8.3bn of reallocated HS2 funding over the next 10 years, the biggest ever increase in funding for local road improvements which comes on top of an existing £5.5bn fund.
“Local authorities received the first £150m of this increase within weeks of announcing our additional funding in October, and will receive a further £150m this year to continue improving local roads.”