Key findings

Key findings

  • There were 5,023 road casualties reported in 2021. Of these, there were 139 fatalities, 1,596 people were seriously injured and 3,288 people were slightly injured.
  • The total casualty figures and fatality figures for 2021 are the lowest since records began. However, they are broadly similar to the previous lows recorded in 2020.
  • Like the figures for 2020, the 2021 casualty numbers will be affected by the Covid-19 pandemic and the associated changes in travel.

Most notably, this included the 'second lockdown', which ran from 5 January 2021 to April 2021, and incorporated a legal requirement forbidding anyone from leaving their home except for essential purposes.

  • The number of fatalities decreased by 2, from 141 in 2020 to 139 in 2021. This latest drop follows on from a long-term downward trend. Since 2000, the number of people killed decreased by 57%, and in the last decade the number decreased by 21%.
  • Car users had the highest number of casualties in 2021 (2,862), followed by pedestrians (758) and pedal cyclists (500).
  • Compared to last year, pedestrian casualties decreased by 7% and pedal cyclists by 18%. However, car casualties increased by 3% and motorcyclists by 8%
  • Scotland's latest road safety framework includes 4 national casualty reduction targets due for delivery in 2030 (Table 1). These compare performance against a 2014-2018 baseline period.
Table 1: Casualty reduction targets from Scotland's 2021 Road Safety Framework
Target 2030 target reduction 2021 reduction achieved
People killed 50% 20%
People seriously injured 50% 45%
Children (aged < 16) killed 60% 23%
Children (aged < 16) seriously injured 60% 50%

Statistics in this publication are provisional. Final figures will be published in Reported Road Casualties Scotland in October 2022. Figures may change as a result of late returns and amendments to the data. These changes are likely to be small.

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