Young drivers' offending cut by half in a decade
The AA says there has been a cultural shift with younger drivers taking less risks. File photo.
Photo:
123RF
Young drivers are committing fewer driving offences than a decade ago, but road deaths remain high, according to new research from the Automobile Association.
The AA said between 2013 and 2024 overall rates of offending by 15 to 19-year-old licensed drivers fell by 41 percent.
Drunk and drugged driving offences fell by 58 percent and seat belt offences dropped by 52 percent.
AA road safety spokesperson Dylan Thomsen said it was encouraging that more young people were following the rules.
"That's a real positive and demonstrates that we are heading in the right direction with the various road safety initiatives and legislative and policy changes that have been undertaken over time," he said.
This included the driving age being raised from 15 to 16, the introduction of a zero-alcohol limit for people under 20 and the toughening of the restricted licence test, Thomsen said.
"I think there's also been a bit of a cultural shift that's started to go on of a bunch of our younger drivers taking a few less risks and being a bit more careful," he said.
The AA's data also showed a reduction in the number of fatalities of young drivers on the roads.
New Zealand had a death toll of 16.6 road deaths per 100,000 licensed young drivers last year. This was compared to 19.7 deaths per 100,000 young drivers in 2023 and 22.5 deaths in 2013.
"Even though the picture is better, we still have the worst rates of road deaths amongst young people of any developed country, and people under 25 in New Zealand die from road crashes at a much higher rate than older age groups," Thomsen said.
"These figures show we need to be focusing on more than just enforcement to bring crash rates down even further."
Thomsen said this latest data was timely with the government considering changes to the Graduated Driver Licensing System.
The government was proposing to
remove the practical driving test needed to get a full car driver's licence
, and reduce the number of eye tests required.
It was also proposing some new safety measures, including requiring drivers on a restricted to keep a clean driving record, halving the demerit threshold for learner and restricted drivers to 50 points, and a zero-alcohol limit for learner and restricted drivers of any age.
Any changes would be implemented in July 2026.
"The AA supports some of the changes being proposed, in particular extending the zero-alcohol limit to cover a learner or restricted driver and more consequences if people offend while novice drivers," Thomsen said.
"However, we also need to lift the level of practice, skills and training that young people have before they start driving solo to help reduce road fatalities.
"The learner and restricted stages of the licensing system are the ideal time to instil practices and habits that will keep novice drivers and others safe on the road."
The AA wanted three changes added to the government's driver licensing proposal:
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
5 hours ago
- RNZ News
Two injured after four cars collide in Auckland
Photo: RNZ / Marika Khabazi Two people have been injured, one moderately and one seriously, after four cars collided in a nose to tail crash in Auckland on Saturday. Northbound motorists are advised to expect delays on the Southern Motorway near the Highbrook off ramp. Police at the scene ask motorists to be patient as there are long queues of traffic at the crash scene. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
East Coast's Pekatahi Bridge worse than Third World
WozHiab transportation operator Warren Sherborne says deck conditions of the Pekatahi Bridge are shaking his loads to bits regardless of how slowly he drives. Photo: Troy Baker Eastern Bay transportation operators are "ropable" about the surface of the Pekatahi Bridge. The 100-year-old, single-lane bridge is on the main State Highway 2 route between the Port of Tauranga and the East Coast and Gisborne. Warren Sherborne who operates WozHiab says the condition of the bridge has become "critical" despite frequent closures for works. "They keep on shutting this bridge down but make no improvement," he said. Sherborne frequently transports portable buildings to Ōpōtiki and the East Coast. "It's like sending your little transportable home through an earthquake. It's just ridiculous. "They're quite fragile," he said of some of his loads. "The bridge is rattling the absolute living crap out of them. We're idling across the bridge in the lowest gear, taking up many phases [of the traffic lights] because we're trying to look after our loads." Having operated the business for five-and-a-half-years, he said he had never seen the bridge in a worse state than now. "At the moment this is just insane. Their latest bridge shuts [during April] have been pointless. The boards are indented now." He expressed fears for the safety of loads. "What if one of our loads was dislodged and came off after that bridge in transit and hurt someone?" He also feared for the effect heavy vehicles vibrating across bumps on the bridge would have on the foundations, likening it to a 40 tonne plate compactor going across the bridge. He said he was reporting the issue to the road transport forum Ia Ara Aotearoa - Transporting New Zealand, of which he is a member. The asphalt over wooden boards on the deck of the Pekatahi Bridge begins to deteriorate within days of undergoing repairs Photo: Troy Baker Robert Monk, from Robert Monk Transport which he said was carting as many as 30 loads a day of export kiwifruit from the Eastern Bay to the Tauranga port, said the bridge deck had gone "beyond a joke". "We're getting shook to pieces on that bridge even though the guys are going slow." He had just pulled a stainless steel screw out of one of his truck's tyres yesterday which he said was just the most recent of many. Recently, he had to pay $1200 for a call out when one of his trucks had a flat tyre from one of the screws. "I'm only a little company but I pay in excess of $1.5 million a year in road users' tax. It's unacceptable. "I'm just ropable. It's costing us a lot of money, and a lot of other transport operators. This stainless steal screw head Robert Monk pulled from one of his truck tyres on Thursday morning is just the latest of many. Photo: Supplied "It is a disgrace," he said. "The roads I travel on, when in the Philippines, are far superior to this, and the Philippines is a so-called Third World country. What does that say about New Zealand?" New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) has said Pekatahi Bridge is not on its End of Life Bridge Register for replacement because the timber and steel sub-structure was in good condition. Design work was underway for a full deck replacement. However, construction was subject to funding and the existing 2024-27 National Land Transport Plan budget was currently oversubscribed. Bridge replacements were prioritised according to the age and condition of the bridge and suitability for current traffic volumes. Pekatahi Bridge did not rate as highly as similar bridges across New Zealand. NZTA planned to shut the bridge for further repairs during the upcoming school holidays, between 30 June and 4 July. Dom Kalasih, chief executive of industry association Ia Ara Aotearoa Transporting New Zealand, told the Beacon the industry had real concerns about how works were being carried out on the bridge. Every repair done to date lasted only a matter of days before it started to fail again and in only a matter of weeks it was as bad as it was before, he said. Doing this several times a year looks like false economy, not to mention the additional freight costs related to the detour are in the order of $100,000 every day. "On average it serves over 10,000 vehicles every day, of which typically nearly 1000 each day are trucks moving goods and freight. The communities are heavily reliant on this connection and for NZTA to think that just because there's a 20-minute detour available this is no longer seen as a priority is incredibly difficult to fathom. "NZTA's new approach is not what our country needs, particularly when productivity improvements are so important to our economy's recovery." A heavy vehicle bumping its way across the Pekatahi Bridge surface on Wednesday. Photo: Troy Baker East Coast MP Dana Kirkpatrick agreed the situation was "deeply frustrating for everyone". "I met with NZTA about this on Tuesday and learned there were three areas they were working on." Short term these were regular maintenance each school holidays to maintain the surface. In the medium term, deck replacement. Longer term, assessing the future of the bridge alongside the necessity for a second Whakatane crossing via the 2027 Regional and National Land Transport Plans. "I impressed upon NZTA the need to evaluate whether spending $12-$14 million on resurfacing the bridge is really the most cost-effective option when it will still leave a one-lane bridge with complicated surface requirements as the main heavy traffic and regional traffic route through the district. "Surely it is time to re-assess a number of components, heavy traffic requirements, the combined councils' spatial and growth planning, which will see this route used more and more, the need to plan and prepare for a new roading project for Whakatane before the traffic volumes reach a stand still, and the economic viability of the region and those of its neighbouring regions who use this route to transport export product to the Port of Tauranga and around the North Island. "As an example you only need to travel the Waioeka Gorge a few times as I do, to realise the amount of heavy traffic travelling north from Gisborne for stock, Leaderbrand vegetables, citrus, products and services to understand the necessity of this piece of infrastructure." "I am determined to keep pushing on these issues - I want people to keep sending me stories and photos. I forward them all to NZTA and it really is making a difference." LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
Person in critical condition after car fire
(File photo) Photo: RNZ One person has been flown to hospital in a critical condition after a car fire in Otago. Emergency services were called to the blaze shortly after 6am on Coast Road in Karitane, north of Dunedin. A St John ambulance spokesperson said multiple crews responded including a helicopter, and one critically injured patient was flown to Dunedin Hospital. Fire and Emergency shift manager Lyn Crosson said the car was 'well-alight' when firefighters from Waikouaiti arrived. "We didn't have to remove anyone from the car," Crosson said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.