Supreme Court PAN India Road Safety Directions
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General Studies Paper II: Public Policy, Issues Relating to Development, Government Policies & Interventions |
Why in News?
Recently, the Supreme Court issued pan-India road safety directions mandating helmet enforcement, strict regulation of highways and time-bound compliance by States to reduce accidents and fatalities.

Highlights of Supreme Court PAN India Road Safety Directions
- Judicial Activism: The Supreme Court of India invoked Article 21 (Right to Life) and Article 142, declaring safe road travel as a fundamental right.
- It stressed that national highways (2% of road length) account for 30% of fatalities, making safety a constitutional obligation, not a policy choice.
- Trigger: The directions arose from a suo motu case after 34 deaths (Nov 2025, Rajasthan & Telangana).
- The Court identified administrative negligence, poor infrastructure, and enforcement gaps as root causes and termed highways turning into “corridors of peril” a failure of governance.
- Principle: The Court categorically held that “no pecuniary or administrative constraint can outweigh the sanctity of human life”, making road safety a non-negotiable governance priority and reinforcing state liability in preventable deaths.
- Absolute Ban on Highway Parking: The Court imposed a strict nationwide ban on parking/stopping of heavy and commercial vehicles on carriageways and shoulders, except at designated lay-bys or authorised facilities.
- Violations to be enforced via Advanced Traffic Management Systems (ATMS), GPS-based evidence, and e-challan systems.
- Land-use Regulation: All unauthorised dhabas, eateries, and commercial structures within the Right of Way (ROW) must be removed within 60 days.
- Further, no new construction or business licence/NOC can be granted in highway safety zones without prior clearance, ensuring regulated land use.
- District Task Forces: Each district must establish a District Highway Safety Task Force involving administration, police, and highway authorities.
- These bodies ensure joint accountability, regular monitoring, land-use control, and strict enforcement through standard operating procedures (SOPs).
- Emergency Response Infrastructure: The Court mandated ambulances and recovery cranes at ≤75 km intervals, continuous highway patrolling, and vehicle tracking systems.
- This ensures rapid accident response, addressing India’s historically weak post-crash care system.
- Blackspot Identification: Authorities must identify accident-prone blackspots within 45 days and implement corrective engineering solutions like better lighting, signage, speed control systems, and road redesign.
- Driver Welfare: The Court directed creation of truck lay-bys, rest areas, food courts, washrooms, and first-aid stations at regular intervals to address driver fatigue, a major contributor to highway accidents in India.
- Technology-driven Enforcement: Mandatory deployment of ATMS, CCTV cameras, speed detectors, emergency call boxes, and real-time monitoring systems ensures data-driven enforcement.
- Public Grievance Redressal: The Court ordered full operationalisation of helpline 1033, Rajmargyatra digital complaint system, and drone-based inspections, enabling citizen reporting of hazards and encroachments.
- Inter-Governmental Coordination: The Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH), NHAI, and all States/UTs must coordinate through an inter-state framework to ensure uniform enforcement standards, eliminating jurisdictional gaps.
- Time-bound Compliance: Strict deadlines: 30–60 days for enforcement actions, 45 days for blackspot identification, and 75 days for compliance reports.
- Authorities must submit consolidated reports, ensuring judicial oversight and accountability.
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Supreme Court Road Safety Directives 2025: The Supreme Court of India, in a landmark ruling on 7 October 2025, issued a comprehensive set of directions to improve road safety across the country.
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Impact of Supreme Court Road Safety Directions
- Reduction in Highway Fatalities: India recorded 1.73 lakh deaths (2023), with 30–34% occurring on National Highways despite only 2% road share. By banning illegal parking and encroachments, the Court directly targets high-speed crash zones.
- This can significantly reduce rear-end and stationary collisions, potentially cutting highway deaths by 10–20% over time.
- Removal of such hazards will reduce high-speed collision risks, especially in rural stretches where fatalities rose sharply (e.g., 155 to 349 deaths in Indore rural areas, 2021–2025).
- Decline in Overspeeding-related Deaths: Before directives, overspeeding caused 58–70% of fatalities (1.2 lakh deaths annually). With ATMS, CCTV enforcement, and real-time challans, behavioural violations will decline.
- Countries using similar systems show 15–25% reduction in speeding deaths, suggesting strong positive spillover in India.
- In Maharashtra (2026), stricter tech-based enforcement already reduced fatalities by 8% and crashes by 2%.
- Improved Emergency Response: India’s weak trauma response leads to preventable deaths; delays are a key factor in high fatality ratios.
- With ambulances every 75 km and patrol systems, the “golden hour” survival rate will improve. Even a 5–10% increase in timely care could save thousands of lives annually.
- Compared to present conditions, unregulated roadside activity zones may shrink by >50%, structurally improving highway safety.
- This aligns India with Vision Zero-type safety frameworks, where human life is prioritised over cost constraints.
- Long-term Economic Benefits: Road accidents cost India 3–5% of GDP annually (WHO estimates) and disproportionately affect the young population (15–29 age group highest deaths).
- By reducing fatalities, the directives will lower healthcare burden, productivity loss, and insurance costs, generating long-term socio-economic gains alongside improved human capital protection.
- This transition may move India closer to OECD-level road safety frameworks over the next decade.
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Initiatives Taken by Government to Prevent Road Accidents:
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Also Read: Government Proposes 10 Minute Modern Ambulance Plan to Reduce Road Deaths |