Skip advert
Advertisement

2,000 lorries a year crash into rail bridges

Network Rail launches campaign to stem tide of lorry ‘bridge bashing’, with each strike costing taxpayers £13,500 to fix

Drivers of oversized lorries who are unfamiliar with their vehicles’ dimensions are responsible for almost 2,000 bridge strikes a year, Network Rail has announced.

UK commuters suffer hours of delays as a result of lorries striking bridges, with individual bridge strikes delaying trains by two hours on average. Taxpayers, meanwhile, are left footing £23million in annual bills due to the damage and delays the accidents cause, with each strike costing around £13,500 to put right.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Some of the worst hit bridges are struck once a month or more, with one in Ely, Cambridgeshire being bashed 113 times since 2009 and a bridge in Tulse Hill, south London, being impacted 92 times over the same period.

Research has found some 43 per cent of lorry drivers don’t know the size of their vehicles, while 52 per cent said they didn’t take low bridges into account when planning their journeys. Around five bridges are hit by lorries every day in the UK.

Network Rail is launching a ‘what the truck’ campaign to reduce bridge strike incidents. The programme involves fitting steel beams to rail bridges to reduce the damage inflicted on them by lorries, improving signage displaying bridge heights and calling for drivers who hit bridges to face stiffer penalties.

Sir Peter Hendy, chairman of Network Rail, said: "Every incident creates potential delay for tens of thousands of passengers and potential costs for taxpayers, and this is happening multiple times a day… we need professional HGV drivers and their operator employers to get behind and support this campaign.”

Haulage firms have broadly welcomed the campaign: Eddie Stobart’s chief operating officer, David Pickering, says his company is installing software early next year which will "warn drivers with an audible alarm when they are approaching a bridge.”

Should more be done to prevent lorries hitting bridges? Let us know your thoughts below...

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Some Chinese car brands are doomed to disappear, warns Skoda boss
Skoda Kodiaq - front cornering

Some Chinese car brands are doomed to disappear, warns Skoda boss

Skoda’s sales and marketing boss warns “there will be a consolidation” of the number of Chinese car brands around
News
3 Feb 2026
New Kia EV1 electric city car on the way to rival the Renault Twingo
Kia EV1 - front (watermarked)

New Kia EV1 electric city car on the way to rival the Renault Twingo

Kia's design boss lifts the lid on plans for a Renault Twingo and Volkswagen ID. Lupo rival, and our exclusive images preview how the EV1 could look
News
2 Feb 2026
New Volkswagen Transporter Sportline brings GTI style to the van world
Volkswagen Transporter Sportline - front

New Volkswagen Transporter Sportline brings GTI style to the van world

The new Volkswagen Transporter Sportline gets a choice of diesel, plug-in hybrid and electric power
News
4 Feb 2026

Find a car with the experts