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What are the safest motorways in the UK?

Screeching tyres and half-crazed looks are all expected, and that's before you realise the devastation that has made you have to pull an emergency stop at 70 mph. Unlike the top risk players like the M6, the East Midlands is home to the safest motorway in the UK – the M42.



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In the United States, there are more than 30,000 deaths due to motor vehicle collisions every single year. In Britain, on the other hand, fewer than 2,000 people lose their lives in motor vehicle crashes annually. This significant discrepancy in death rates can be explained, in part, by differences in population.

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Drivers have rated the M5 the best motorway in England for 2023 – and the A303 the best road.

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British roads are among the safest in Europe, after Sweden, Norway and Switzerland. Of the 1,752 deaths on them in 2019, only 105 were on motorways and just 14 on smart motorways. Motorway fatalities are now so low that one snowstorm or rainy month can make the difference between figures rising or falling year on year.

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Despite the upgrades, the A1(M) remains one of the most hazardous roads in the UK. In fact, it has earned the title of Britain's deadliest road, with collisions causing the deaths of 172 people over the past decade alone. Between 2007 and 2016, the road saw a total of 7,848 accidents involving 10,821 vehicles.

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The M96, positioned 20 miles from the M5 and the M50, has remained a well-hidden secret for years that saves countless lives. The 400-metre-long stretch of road in Moreton-in-Marsh has seen more crashes and traffic incidents than major routes because of its special purpose of training blue light workers.

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The M45 is a motorway in Northamptonshire and Warwickshire, England and is 7.9 miles (12.7 km) long. It runs between junction 17 of the M1 motorway south east of Rugby and a junction with the A45 road southwest of Rugby. It has one of the lowest traffic volumes of the United Kingdom motorway system.

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Yes, driving in Britain (or indeed anywhere else in europe) is quite a bit harder than the USA. The reason being is that many of our roads grew organically around buildings and fields and were only wide enough for a horse and cart doing 2mph. Whereas the majority of US roads were purpose built for automobiles.

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Hardknott Pass is considered to be one of the most challenging in the UK. It has earned this consideration due to its series of hairpin bends and the high risk of ice on the road. It is a steep, twisting, single-track road that cuts right through the heart of the Lake District between the Duddon Valley and Eskdale.

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Despite the upgrades, the A1(M) remains one of the most hazardous roads in the UK. In fact, it has earned the title of Britain's deadliest road, with collisions causing the deaths of 172 people over the past decade alone. Between 2007 and 2016, the road saw a total of 7,848 accidents involving 10,821 vehicles.

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Answer. Answer: A motorway just relates to the A road that it's relieving pressure from. The reason there is no M7 is that the A7, which runs from Carlisle to Edinburgh has no need for a motorway to relieve it.

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