EVER wondered what speed you actually have to be doing to get caught by a speed camera?
Could even 1 mph over the limit do it? Or maybe you heard it was 10 per cent?
But Lancashire Police has now cleared up the matter – and revealed the ‘buffer zone’ on cameras is anything up to 10 per cent plus 3mph over the designated limit.
The constabulary breaks the trend compared to other forces, with all the others, bar the Metropolitan Police, have buffers up to 10 per cent plus 2mph over the limit.
So, that means on a 30mph limit road, the cameras will allow 36mph.
40mph limits the threshold is 47mph.
50mph areas, the threshold is 58mph
60mph limit, the threshold is 69mph
70mph limit, the threshold is 80mph.
However, before you go breaking the limit, be warned – the police force applies this rule at its discretion, so as well as it being dangerous, pushing your luck might also still get you fined.
Specialist car title Auto Express asked all police forces in the country what discretion they applied to speed cameras before they caught and fined drivers.
Of the 34 UK police forces shared information on when their speed cameras activate if a driver is going above the speed limit.
Most police forces have a tolerance of 10 per cent plus 2mph before a speed camera ‘flashes’.
Why does it exist?
This ‘buffer zone’ exists in order to improve driver safety - as AA president Edmund King puts it:
He said: “The last thing we want is drivers glued to the speedometer 100 per cent of the time.
"We want drivers to concentrate on the road ahead."
Speedometers are also not 100 per cent accurate – they are allowed to ‘over read’ the speed by up to 10 per cent.
However, for safety reasons they are not permitted to ‘under read’ the speed a car is going.
READ - REVEALED: 10 car crash hotspots in Blackburn with Darwen
Will I get away with it?
Hedging your bets and speeding because of these thresholds is not only dangerous, but it could land you with a fine, according to comparison site Confused.com
The tolerance levels for speeding are at the discretion of the police force.
Therefore they’re within their rights to punish any driver that flouts the limit even by a few miles per hour.
In 2017 the rules on speeding fines changed so that they were based on a percentage of your weekly income.
This is in addition to getting points on your licence.
Here's a breakdown of all the police forces and their buffer zones.
Avon and Somerset
10 per cent + 2mph
Bedfordshire
Wouldn't reveal threshold
Cambridgeshire
Wouldn't reveal threshold
Cheshire
10 per cent + 2mph
Cleveland
10 per cent + 2mph
Derbyshire
10 per cent + 2mph
Devon and Cornwall
10 per cent + 2mph
Durham
10 per cent + 2mph
Essex
Don't use a standard threshold
Greater Manchester
Wouldn't reveal threshold
Gwent
10 per cent + 2mph
Hampshire
10 per cent + 2mph
Hertfordshire
Wouldn't reveal threshold
Kent
10 per cent + 2mph
Lancashire
10 per cent + 3mph
Leicestershire
10 per cent + 2mph
Merseyside
10 per cent + 2mph
Metropolitan Police / TfL
10 per cent + 3mph
Norfolk
10 per cent + 2mph
North Wales
10 per cent + 2mph
Northumbria
10 per cent + 2mph
Nottinghamshire
Wouldn't confirm if threshold exists
Northern Ireland
10 per cent + 2mph
Scotland
Wouldn't confirm if threshold exists
South Wales
10 per cent + 2mph
South Yorkshire
10 per cent + 2mph
Staffordshire
Wouldn't reveal threshold
Suffolk
10 per cent + 2mph
Thames Valley
10 per cent + 2mph
Warwickshire
10 per cent + 2mph
West Mercia
10 per cent + 2mph
West Midlands
Wouldn't reveal threshold
West Yorkshire
10 per cent + 2mph
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