Speeding In The UK Is About To Get Really Expensive And Most People Have No Idea

If you get caught too far over the speed limit after this weekend, you could get stung by new, higher penalties that could cost you a week and a half's pay
Speeding In The UK Is About To Get Really Expensive And Most People Have No Idea

Speeding is one of the most divisive issues in the car world. We probably all do it, whether it’s driving at 25mph in a 20mph limit or 80mph on a 70mph motorway. But while the punishments used to be a minor slap on the wrist until you got caught too many times, a new system is about to come into force. Let’s just say it’s rather unfriendly when it comes to your relationship with your wallet.

The system is changing, raising the maximum possible fine from 100 per cent of your weekly wages to 150 per cent, and in numbers that equates to maximums of £1000 on A- and B-roads, plus urban streets, and £2500 on the motorway. While creeping over the limit won’t net you a bigger punishment than before, going a bit bonkers could see you really getting stung.

Speeding In The UK Is About To Get Really Expensive And Most People Have No Idea

A study by Honest John suggests that 84 per cent of people don’t know what this all means, or that it comes into force in a few days on 24 April. Effectively, as of then, the courts will be able to ask for proof of your weekly take-home pay and charge you up to 150 per cent of it. Ouch. To get into that mess you have to have been doing 41mph or more in a 20mph zone, 51mph or more in a 30mph area or, at the top end, 101mph or more on a 70mph road. Below that level of excess, the punishments stay the same.

But is this just a big, steaming pile of bull? Given that the speed limits in the UK were set back when staying at 70mph for too long might actually result in a breakdown, and when for many cars even getting to 70mph at all was a mission, why are we saying that we’re no safer than 60 years ago? In many towns speed limits have actually been lowered, from 30mph to 20mph.

Speeding In The UK Is About To Get Really Expensive And Most People Have No Idea

The counterpoint to this is how much busier the roads are these days. If you lose control, the chances of you hitting other people are much higher than they were in the 1960s, and cars are heavier now, making them more dangerous when they’re pinballing around a carriageway. On the other hand, there’s simply no comparison between the protection offered by a modern car and the non-existent impact absorption of a 60-year-old family car.

There are also a lot more semi-autonomous safety features today, like cruise control, autonomous emergency braking and even systems that can swerve to avoid a crash. Surely that’s enough to offset a higher speed limit? Frankly, I reckon the limits on motorways should have risen, if nothing else.

Speeding In The UK Is About To Get Really Expensive And Most People Have No Idea

The really annoying thing is that people like us tend not to be to blame. We love our cars, we love driving and we respect the roads because we know what can happen if we get things badly wrong, but at the same time we’re also more attentive than the average driver, more in tune with our cars and more capable of gathering-up a minor loss of control without panicking. We don’t deserve to be treated like naughty kids if we choose to go a bit faster than the limit.

I know of some pretty stupid 20mph zones where nothing goes on and 40mph feels fine. I also know some 60mph roads where I daren’t go past 30mph because they’re narrow and perpetually blind. How does that happen? Who knows. What we do know is that if you like to put the hammer down, you could be in for a shock when the fine comes through.

Comments

Andrew G.

Weekly pay? What if ypu are a Youtuber or other freelancer. You could not work a week and get off scott free?

04/22/2017 - 08:49 |
49 | 2

You still break down your income to a weekly salary. The people this actually hurts is rich people that a fine is pocket change to.

Imagine the fine for twenty mph over for the head of a multinational…

04/22/2017 - 09:18 |
12 | 0

“… max fine of £2500”

04/23/2017 - 19:36 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

All these first world countries fine speedsters for breaking the law, while the ministers can get away with it just by using police escorts. Bunch of corrupted Brits oppressing the people from having fun (and promotes late to work discipline too) :-| smh

04/22/2017 - 08:57 |
4 | 3
Anonymous

Wait, isn’t there a tolerance of 5-10mph?
I always thought there was a tolerance of 5-10 kmph everywhere in europe.

04/22/2017 - 08:58 |
1 | 1
Roadster / Tail Red

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Not here in NL. Plus you pay administration tax that is at low speed fines higher than the fine itself

#JustDutchThings

04/22/2017 - 09:01 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

No. Police can exercise discretion but the “tolerance” is an urban myth.

04/22/2017 - 09:20 |
2 | 0
DementedMonkeys

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

It’s a percentage of the speed limit in most of europe. Around 5% i reckon.

04/22/2017 - 13:39 |
1 | 0
TheMindGarage

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I think where I live (varies in different parts of England) there is a 10% tolerance. Which explains why most people set their cruise control to 77mph xD.

04/22/2017 - 17:34 |
1 | 0
SAVAGE DOGG (Ping-Pong Gang) (Corvette Squad)

Problem solved

04/22/2017 - 08:58 |
5 | 2

And highly illegal

04/22/2017 - 09:00 |
5 | 1

Instant ban in the UK. Especially those flip-up plates you see on motorbikes.

04/26/2017 - 19:22 |
0 | 0
Wheel Nuts

You shouldn’t speed, but we all edge over the limit occasionally by accident. Having your eyes glued to the speedo isn’t safe either so I think its a bit harsh that you can get 3 points and a £250 ish fine for doing 1mph over the limit. I think a crackdown on inattentive and unsafe drivers is more needed. Also I think we should have to retake our driving test every 10 years or so which would reduce the number of unsafe drivers.

04/22/2017 - 08:59 |
26 | 2

Agreed, although at least in my county you can only be fined if you’re more than 10% over the limit. Still, I think instead of just “speeding”, the rules should be that you get fined if you’re going faster than is safe - this would depend on the conditions. In Germany, some autobahns have lower speed limits in force when it is wet - this is a good idea.

04/22/2017 - 17:30 |
3 | 0

I think every 3 years for the first 10 years, then every 10. I’m not the perfect driver (I used to speed way over the national speed limit on the motorway) but I see too many bad disciplines every day from a lot of drivers

04/22/2017 - 17:43 |
0 | 0
NotARealRoadTest

Totally agree with the main points of this article. There are parts of the M1 where 100 mph is a manageable speed if a little bit on the brisk end.
I used to speed until recently, but I think I actually paid more attention when driving faster than everyone else on the motorway than I do now, not going above 76 mph. And I think that is less safe

04/22/2017 - 09:14 |
2 | 2

Sometimes my parents inadvertently “follow the pack”. If someone going at 70mph suddenly steps on it, nobody will follow. But if the front car gradually ups the speed 1mph at a time, everyone else will follow, even up to 90mph. To be honest, eveyone going at 90mph isn’t a problem - it’s when one car decides to go far faster or far slower than everyone else that accidents happen.

04/22/2017 - 17:37 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

Thank god they made FF6 before this.

04/22/2017 - 09:18 |
1 | 2
Jakob

There is a trick to outsmart any speed trap. It’s easy and it’s simply and it’s cheap. Sometimes you see two-digit numbers on the side of the road, usually with a red circle around them. Now, if you make sure that the speedometer on your cars shows the exact same number as you just saw, or a lower number, you basically are invisible to any speed trap.
Crazy, isn’t it?

04/22/2017 - 09:29 |
12 | 9
Spengabobbu

In reply to by Jakob

No! Just no!!!

04/22/2017 - 13:50 |
2 | 2
Ammopal

There’s no need for going 40 in a 20 zone or 50 in a 30 zone. The limits are put in place for a reason.

04/22/2017 - 09:44 |
2 | 2
DementedMonkeys

In reply to by Ammopal

The reason is to make money off of petty violations. There are studies that show how much autonomous cars would hurt city budgets because they’d be extremely hard to fine.

04/22/2017 - 13:40 |
1 | 1
CatHat

thats it. screw the uk. im going to bulgaria, were you can calmly and legally do 140kmph and crossing the limit is common

04/22/2017 - 10:13 |
4 | 2

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