Changeflow GovPing Transportation New Rules for Council Pothole Funding Spending ...
Routine Notice Added Final

New Rules for Council Pothole Funding Spending in England

Favicon for www.gov.uk UK DfT
Published
Detected
Email

Summary

The UK Department for Transport announced new requirements for local councils in England on spending pothole repair funding. Councils must now prove they are spending highways funding purely on road maintenance or risk losing up to a third of their £1.6 billion funding. Approximately £525 million will be held back from councils across England unless they demonstrate transparency and good performance.

What changed

The Department for Transport has announced new oversight measures requiring local highway authorities in England to demonstrate they are using pothole repair funding for its intended purpose. Councils that fail to prove effective road maintenance could lose up to a third of their £1.6 billion annual funding, with approximately £525 million held back across England. Councils must now publish transparency reports, show long-term maintenance plans, and ensure adequate training for highways staff.

Local councils and highway authorities will need to establish robust reporting mechanisms to document spending and demonstrate performance. The new requirements aim to ensure taxpayer money delivers visible improvements in road quality, addressing driver concerns about pothole damage that costs an estimated £500 per affected vehicle. Red-rated councils will receive funding support to improve performance rather than simply losing access to funds.

What to do next

  1. Publish reports proving highways funding is spent solely on road maintenance
  2. Develop long-term plans for road maintenance
  3. Provide better training for highways teams

Archived snapshot

Apr 15, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Press release

Councils face new rules for spending pothole funding, or risk losing their cash

We’re making sure every pound goes straight into fixing roads and tackling potholes across England, not being spent elsewhere.

From: Department for Transport and Simon Lightwood MP Published 14 April 2026

  • councils will now face tougher rules to prove they are fixing potholes or risk losing up to a third of next year’s funding
  • government is ensuring taxpayers’ money is working harder to get smoother roads and not redirected elsewhere
  • red-rated councils will receive funding to improve performance and deliver visibly smoother, safer roads Councils will face new rules on how they spend funding to fix potholes and maintain local roads, as the government today (14 April 2026) sets out new requirements to ensure taxpayers see real improvements.

Under the new measures, local highway authorities that fail to demonstrate they are maintaining roads effectively could lose around a third of their £1.6 billion funding for the next year.

Pothole damage already costs the average driver around £500 in avoidable repairs at a time when every pound in people’s pockets matters, and the government is determined to ease that financial burden by ensuring councils fix roads properly.

The changes will ensure that record investment in local roads is used as intended, with a total of £525 million held back from councils across England unless they are transparent and prove they are performing.

Councils must publish reports proving they are spending all of their highways cash purely on road maintenance, showing long-term plans for looking after roads and better training for their highways teams.

These new measures mean taxpayers know exactly where their money is going and will start to see smoother roads and an end to the pothole plague.

Roads and Buses Minister, Simon Lightwood, said:

Drivers deserve smooth, safe journeys and we’re making sure every pound goes straight into fixing roads and tackling potholes, not being spent elsewhere.

Potholes aren’t just an inconvenience — they cost drivers hundreds, if not more, every time they cause damage to a vehicle. Fixing our roads is one of the most impactful things we can do to reduce the cost of owning and driving a car and we’re making sure every pound goes straight into doing exactly that.

We’ve made it crystal clear that councils that fail to maintain their roads will now risk losing up to a third of their funding.

And for the first time, we’re giving councils multi-year funding so they can plan properly and reverse a decade of decline in our roads.
RAC head of policy, Simon Williams, said:

These measures should go a long way to addressing the poor condition of local roads, which we know from research for the RAC report on motoring is drivers’ number-one concern.

Ensuring money that is given to councils to improve their roads is actually spent on roads is critical, so the government’s focus on this will be welcomed by drivers. And, while fixing dangerous potholes is vital, it’s also very positive to see councils being encouraged to carry out preventative maintenance work, which will stop potholes forming in the future.

Having the certainty of funding over the next 5 years for councils to plan proper maintenance programmes should result in better quality roads for all.
Edmund King, AA president, said:

Fixing potholes remains the number one motoring issue for drivers, so it is right that councils are being scrutinised over their repair plans.

We urge local authorities to use their funding to resurface roads rather than simply patch up their streets. Proper investment in the road network helps create safer, smoother journeys for everyone.
This follows the government’s first-of-a-kind red, amber or green ratings to grade 154 local highway authorities (LHA) based on current road condition and how effectively they are spending the government’s record £7.3 billion funding. This includes a map showing the public how well councils are doing in delivering the improvements they want to see in their local area. Councils now have record multi-year funding to get on with the job of delivering safer, smoother journeys.

The government is also commencing its new support for the 13 red-rated local highway authorities. Each will be supported with a total of £300,000 worth of expert planning for over 2 years, designed to help councils raise standards, fix more roads and deliver better results for road users.

We are also backing local highways authorities with a record multi-year investment to improve the condition of their roads, after years of them calling for long-term certainty.

Roads media enquiries

Media enquiries 0300 7777 878

Switchboard 0300 330 3000

Share this page

The following links open in a new tab

Updates to this page

Published 14 April 2026

Get daily alerts for UK DfT

Daily digest delivered to your inbox.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

About this page

What is GovPing?

Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission

What's from the agency?

Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from DfT.

What's AI-generated?

The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.

Last updated

Classification

Agency
DfT
Published
April 14th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Road maintenance funding Local council compliance
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Transportation
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Financial Services Consumer Protection

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when UK DfT publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

You're subscribed!