Motoring

20M planned trips to spark ‘autumn rush’ on the roads this half term

The arrival of the October half term in England and Wales will spark an ‘autumn rush’ on the roads with drivers taking an estimated 19.4m separate leisure trips between Friday and Sunday, according to research by RAC Breakdown.

The survey of 1,400 drivers suggests that Saturday will be the most popular day on the roads with drivers planning an estimated 5.6m ‘getaway’ journeys, followed by Sunday (4.6m) and Friday (4.3m) with an additional 4.9m trips planned across one of the three days.

The data shows that Covid is not putting drivers off making leisure trips as much as it did earlier in the year.

Now just 6 per cent of respondents list the pandemic as the reason for not going away this half term, compared to 10 per cent who said this in relation to the August bank holiday weekend and 18% who did ahead of the May Day bank holiday.

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Separate RAC research suggests that of those planning a trip this late October, most (72 per cent) will be go no more than 200 miles from home, but around a fifth (22 per cent) expect to go further than they typically would during this time of year.

When it comes to locations, Devon and Yorkshire are most popular (8 per cent each), followed by Norfolk or Suffolk (7 per cent), Dorset (6 per cent), Blackpool and the Lancashire coast (6 per cent) and Cornwall (5 per cent).

But nearly one-in-10 drivers (9 per cent) who are planning a getaway haven’t yet decided where they’ll go.

With cooler and more unsettled weather expected across much of the UK, the RAC is reminding drivers to check their cars are ‘road ready’ before setting out to avoid an unnecessary breakdown.

RAC Breakdown spokesperson Rod Dennis said: “Summer might be long gone but these figures suggest there might still be something of an ‘autumn rush’ on the roads in the coming days as millions of drivers look to get away for the half term holidays.

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“That could well spark a jump in the number of breakdowns and, while many of these can’t be foreseen, a good number could be avoided if drivers spent just a little time looking over their cars before setting out.

“Our research also shows that despite a rise in Covid cases nationally, it’s clear the pandemic is becoming much less of a factor in whether people decide whether or not to get away for a leisure trip.

“Just six-in-100 drivers say they’re not travelling specifically because of the virus, compared to 10 per cent before the August bank holiday and 18 per cent at the start of May.

“It might also be the case that the rise in UK ‘staycations’ brought about by Covid has encouraged some drivers to venture further afield than they would normally at this time of year.”

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