Hand-held mobile phone convictions hit seven-year high

The number of drivers in England and Wales convicted of using a hand-held mobile phone has reached a seven-year high, according to the AA.

Driver using smartphone

Some 13,332 drivers were found guilty at court for hand-held mobile phone use last year

Some 13,332 drivers were found guilty at court for the offence last year, according to latest figures from the Ministry of Justice. Compared to the 6,990 drivers found guilty in 2022, the jump represents a 90% increase.

The law surrounding the use of a hand-held mobile phone was tightened in March 2022, extending the type of devices contravening the law as well as expanding the definition of ‘using’ to include using a camera, accessing the internet and checking notifications.

The AA believes this action, coupled with police forces across the country using roadside cameras, covert HGVs and targeted periods of enforcement, have contributed to the rise.

Analysis by the motoring services specialist of the Ministry of Justice figures also show that driving without vehicle tax rose to an all-time high of 99,694 convictions; a year-on-year increase of 94%. Similarly, drivers failing to comply with red lights and signs were at a 12-year high of 11,940 guilty verdicts.

Speeding cases down, but drink- and drug-driving remain static

Elsewhere, court cases for speeding offences fell by 8%, with more than 203,500 guilty verdicts handed to drivers. When looking at motor insurance cases, driving a vehicle without insurance fell to 71,458 last year (76,390 in 2022), but keeping a vehicle without insurance reaching a four-year high (58,690 in 2023 vs 40,392 in 2022).

Drink- and drug-driving related cases, seatbelt offences and driving whilst disqualified also remained at similar levels to 2022.

In total, 732,758 drivers were in the dock for motoring-related offences, with 672,901 being found guilty – a conviction rate of 92%, showing that drivers sat in front of a judge or magistrate are unlikely to get away with it. Motoring offences also took up the lion’s share of the courts’ time, with three in every five cases being for driving misdemeanours.

Jack Cousens, head of roads policy for the AA, said: “Despite a high-profile change in the law, it seems many drivers are still falling foul when it comes to using a mobile phone behind the wheel.

“While our phones have become smart, it is dumb to play with it when driving. The AA led the campaign for tougher enforcement and strong rules to stamp out this offence, but it seems too many fear missing out on their notifications. The best thing to do is convert the glove box into a phone box and keep the mobile out of reach.

“It is also concerning that driving without tax almost doubled in a year. While too early to tell if this rise is related to the cost of living, the high conviction rates should serve as a deterrent not to dodge paying for a virtual tax disc.”

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Natalie Middleton

Natalie has worked as a fleet journalist for over 20 years, previously as assistant editor on the former Company Car magazine before joining Fleet World in 2006. Prior to this, she worked on a range of B2B titles, including Insurance Age and Insurance Day.

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