Motorhome bridge strikes in the UK (2026): incidents, what to do, how to prevent
UK bridge strikes happen roughly once every five hours — 1,666 in the year to March 2025 per Network Rail. Most are HGVs and buses, but motorhome incidents recur: Skeldergate Bridge York (2023), Broughton Hall Road Cheshire (a known repeat site), Denham Bridge Devon (2024). After a strike: stop, don't reverse if the vehicle is damaged, call police if the road's blocked, photograph everything, notify your insurer, and expect Network Rail to invoice the repair cost back through the driver / insurer chain. Prevention comes down to four things — get the height right once, use a dimension-aware sat nav, read the physical signs on unfamiliar roads, and avoid the high-risk regional patterns.
Not a scare piece. The point of writing it is the opposite — most motorhome owners go a full career without hitting anything, and the few who do tend to do it once. This is the page you want bookmarked the day it happens, plus the small set of steps that means it doesn't.
The scale, in Network Rail's own numbers
Between April 2024 and March 2025 Network Rail logged 1,666 bridge strikes across the UK rail network — about one every five hours. The cost to the railway alone: £12 million in damage and 186,384 minutes of delay. The most-struck single bridge that year was on Watling Street (the A5) at Hinckley, with 22 hits. Scotland recorded 158 strikes for the year (Network Rail press release).
The headline number is dominated by HGVs and buses, not motorhomes. That's worth saying clearly — a motorhome owner reading "one every five hours" should not assume the rig is the typical culprit. Most strikes come from commercial drivers using truck-spec routing inconsistently, or from articulated trailers on tight urban turns. Motorhomes are a smaller share of the total. The reason the failure mode generalises is the cause: in nearly every strike, the driver had been routed somewhere by a navigation app that didn't know the vehicle's height. The fix is the same across all vehicle classes — dimension-aware routing plus reading the physical signs when the map and the road disagree.
2023–2026 motorhome incidents
A short inventory of verified UK motorhome and large-leisure-vehicle incidents from the last three years. Padstow (Cornwall, September 2023) is documented on the parent topic page and not repeated here.
| Date | Location | What happened | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| July 2023 | Skeldergate Bridge, York | A Chausson motorhome wedged on the 2.6 m (8 ft 6 in) height barrier under the bridge on Terry Avenue. Fire crews took around 45 minutes to free it. | Van Life Matters |
| 2021 (recurring in 2024 forum cites) | Hemmick Beach, Gorran Haven, Cornwall | A Hampshire couple's motorhome was stuck for six hours on the lane down to Hemmick Beach. Green Flag arranged a 4×4 tow to extract it. | motorhomefun.co.uk thread |
| November 2016 and recurring | Broughton Hall Road, Cheshire | The 7'9" (2.36 m) bridge at Broughton has had multiple motorhome and caravan strikes over a decade, prompting renewed local calls for additional warning signage. | Daily Post |
| 2024 | Polperro, Cornwall | A caravan wedged in a narrow village lane around 09:30; it was freed by a local farmer with a tractor. | Caravan Times |
| 2024 | Llanbedr, Gwynedd | A two-motorhome stand-off on a narrow B-road went viral; the council used the footage to renew its long-running bypass campaign. | Daily Post |
| April 2024 | Denham Bridge, Bere Alston, Devon | Around 3 m of the Grade-II listed parapet was demolished by a vehicle strike. It was the second damage incident in a few weeks; the bridge was closed for assessment. | Devon County Council |
| Pre-2024 (canonical case still cited 2025) | Bealach na Bà, Applecross | A large motorhome was photographed mid-hairpin on the Bealach na Bà mountain pass by photographer Annabel Macrae. The image is still widely shared as a warning case for the limits of large-rig single-track routing. | The Scotsman |
The pattern across the seven cases is the same: in five of them the vehicle reached the failure point by following a consumer-grade navigation app (Google Maps, Apple Maps, or the built-in vehicle nav) that routed without reference to height, width, or length. In the other two — Bealach na Bà and Llanbedr — the driver chose the road independently, but both are routes that dimension-aware sat-navs routinely deprioritise or warn against for vehicles over 7 m.
What to do after a strike or a stuck situation
- Stop the vehicle. Don't try to reverse with damage — reversing under a damaged structure risks worse damage and possible injury to anyone behind the vehicle. If the rig is wedged but not damaged, still wait for assessment before any movement.
- Switch hazards on. If the road is blocked or anyone's injured, call 999. If there's no immediate danger but the police should know — single-vehicle, no injuries, vehicle drivable away — 101 is the right number.
- Take photos before recovery moves the vehicle. The vehicle from multiple angles, the bridge or structure, the height signage on both approaches, the road context. These photos do more work later — for the insurer, the police if they investigate, and Network Rail or the council if they invoice — than anything else you'll do in the first hour.
- Notify your insurer. Most UK motorhome policies expect notification of any incident within 24 to 48 hours. The earlier the better — the insurer's loss adjuster wants to see the scene before recovery alters it.
- If it's a railway bridge, expect Network Rail. Network Rail is the named claimant for the repair cost on any rail-network bridge strike. They typically work through the police report and the insurer chain, not directly with the driver, but the driver should expect to hear from them at some point in the weeks following.
The legal framing
Worth understanding the difference between the two sign types before any of the rest matters. A regulatory height sign is the red circle around a height figure — the Road Traffic Act treats passage of an overheight vehicle under one of these as an offence, and the driver can be prosecuted. A warning height sign is the red triangle — it's not itself a regulatory offence to pass it overheight, but a strike at that location still creates civil liability for the damage caused.
Network Rail typically invoice the cost of railway-bridge repair back through the driver or the driver's insurer; the route the invoice takes depends on the police report and the insurer's assessment of liability. Police usually require reporting if the road is blocked or any property is damaged, regardless of which sign type the bridge carried.
This is informational only — it isn't legal advice. The exact application varies by the local police force's reporting threshold, the bridge's owner (Network Rail vs Highways England vs local authority vs Grade-listed), and whether the police investigation concludes the driver took a regulatory sign. If you're in this situation, talk to your insurer's legal helpline before assuming anything specific about exposure.
Insurance implications
Most comprehensive UK motorhome policies cover driver-error bridge strikes both for own-vehicle damage and for third-party repair to the structure. Standard excess applies, and the premium typically rises at renewal — a strike sits on the disclosure record for five years in most insurer practice. None of that is unusual.
The case to watch is where the police investigation concludes the driver ignored a regulatory (red-circle) sign. Some insurers treat that as a deliberate breach of road regulations rather than an accident and may decline cover for the third-party repair, leaving the driver personally exposed to a Network Rail or council invoice that can run into five figures for serious damage. The policy wording on this varies — it's worth checking the specific clause covering "regulatory sign breach" or "driver negligence" in your motorhome policy before assuming the bridge is covered as well as the rig.
Where the strike is at a warning (red-triangle) sign, insurer treatment is usually more straightforward — accidental driver error, covered for both own damage and third-party repair within the comprehensive policy terms.
The four prevention steps that actually work
- Get the height right once. V5C / registration document + every roof addition (A/C unit, satellite dish, solar panels, roof rails) + 10 cm safety margin. Bridges are surveyed to nominal height; road resurfacing reduces clearance over time. See will my motorhome fit under UK bridges for the calculation in detail.
- Use a dimension-aware sat nav. Sygic Truck & Camper, CoPilot Caravan, TomTom GO Camper, or Rovee (closed beta) — see the app matrix on the parent page for the trade-offs. The consumer apps (Google Maps, Apple Maps, Waze) route every vehicle as a car and have caused most of the documented motorhome strikes in the inventory above.
- Read the physical signs on unfamiliar roads. The signs win when the map disagrees. Slow down on the approach to any village centre or rural side road, drop the radio, look up. A dimension-aware app catches the great majority; the physical signs catch the rest.
- Avoid the high-risk regional patterns. Cornish village descents, Lake District passes, NC500 single-track, Cotswold historic streets, narrow Welsh B-roads — see UK narrow lanes for the named routes most likely to put a large rig in trouble.
Which apps catch the height before you do
The full app-by-app matrix lives on the avoid low bridges parent page — Apple Maps, Google Maps, Waze, Sygic Truck & Camper, CoPilot Caravan, TomTom GO Navigation in Camper mode, CaraMaps Premium, and Rovee compared on height, width, weight, narrow-lane avoidance, offline maps, and pricing.
The short version: any of the four vehicle-aware apps (Sygic, CoPilot, TomTom GO Camper, Rovee) will refuse to route a 3.2 m (10 ft 6 in) rig under a 2.7 m (8 ft 10 in) bridge at the planning step. The route never touches the restricted bridge. The consumer apps don't do this — even when you've entered your height, the routing engine reads it as a car line.
Rovee routes for the rig — height, width, weight, length — and combines tolls, vignettes, and low-emission-zone awareness in one CarPlay-friendly app. Closed iPhone beta now, public launch Friday August 7, 2026.
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FAQ
How often do motorhomes hit bridges in the UK?
Network Rail recorded 1,666 bridge strikes between April 2024 and March 2025 — roughly one every five hours. Most are HGVs and buses; motorhome incidents are a smaller share but recur regularly. Documented motorhome cases in the last three years include Skeldergate Bridge in York (July 2023), Broughton Hall Road in Cheshire (a known repeat-strike site), and Denham Bridge in Devon (April 2024). The underlying pattern in nearly every case is the same — a driver trusted a navigation app that didn't know the vehicle's height.
What do I do if my motorhome hits a bridge?
Stop. Don't reverse if the vehicle is damaged — reversing under a damaged bridge risks worse damage and injury. Put hazards on. Call 999 if the road is blocked or anyone's injured; 101 if there's no immediate danger. Photograph the vehicle, the bridge, any height signage, and the surroundings before recovery moves the vehicle. Notify your insurer; most UK motorhome policies expect notification within 24 to 48 hours of an incident.
Will my motorhome insurance cover a bridge strike?
Most comprehensive UK motorhome policies do cover driver-error bridge strikes — both own-vehicle damage and third-party repair to the bridge structure. Standard excess applies, and the premium usually rises at renewal. Some insurers may decline cover where the driver was prosecuted for ignoring a regulatory (red-circle) height sign, treating it as a deliberate breach rather than an accident. Check the policy wording before assuming you're covered for the bridge as well as the rig.
Can I be prosecuted for hitting a bridge in the UK?
The Road Traffic Act treats passing an overheight vehicle under a regulatory (red-circle) height-restriction sign as an offence — the driver can be prosecuted. A warning (red-triangle) sign isn't itself a regulatory offence, but a strike at that location still creates civil liability for the damage caused. Police investigation is typical after any railway-bridge strike because of the safety implications for the rail network and the scale of the damage.
Who pays for the damage to the bridge?
For railway bridges, Network Rail invoice the driver — or the driver's insurer — for the repair cost. For serious strikes this can run into the tens of thousands of pounds; the 2024–25 total across all 1,666 strikes was £12 million. For council-owned road bridges, the local highways authority claims through the same chain. If the bridge is a Grade-listed structure (as at Denham, Devon in 2024), repair costs are higher because the work has to use period-appropriate materials and methods.
When can I get Rovee?
Rovee is in closed iPhone beta in 2026, with public launch on Friday August 7, 2026. Founding-member access is capped at the first 1,000 members at €17.99/year price-locked as long as you stay subscribed. Join the waitlist below.