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The parts of Australia with the highest road tolls revealed

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in Auto News
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In the lead-up to the Federal Election, Australia’s peak body for motorists has revealed the 25 electorates with the worst road tolls while again calling for better transparency for crash data.

Information published by the Australian Automobile Association (AAA) shows that out of the 151 federal electorates, the national median road toll is six motorists per year.

Tragically, all 25 electorates on its list exceed the median by more than double.

At the top of the list is the Northern Territory electorate of Lingiari, which in 2024 was the site of 46 road fatalities.

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Despite the relatively low population of the region, it’s Australia’s second-largest electorate by size, covering all of the Northern Territory except for Darwin and Palmerston. 

Behind it in the list for road fatalities were Parkes in New South Wales (38 in 2024), Durack in Western Australia (32 in 2023, as 2024 data wasn’t available), Maranoa in Queensland (31 in 2024), and O’Connor in Western Australia and New England in New South Wales tied on 30.

Lingiari, Durack, Maranoa and O’Connor are four of the ‘big six’ electorates – in addition to Grey and Kennedy – which represent more than 75 per cent of Australia’s electoral land mass. These are largely rural or regional electorates.

Federal electorate State or territory Deaths in 2024 (or 2023 for Western Australia)
Lingiari Northern Territory 46
Parkes New South Wales 38
Durack Western Australia 32
Maranoa Queensland 31
O’Connor Western Australia 30
New England New South Wales 30
Nicholls Victoria 26
Kennedy Queensland 25
Barker South Australia 25
Grey South Australia 22
Wannon Victoria 22
Farrer New South Wales 21
Indi Victoria 21
Flynn Queensland 20
Dawson Queensland 20
Riverina New South Wales 18
Capricornia Queensland 18
Page New South Wales 17
Hinkley Queensland 17
Leichhardt Queensland 17
Calare New South Wales 16
Mayo South Australia 16
Wright Queensland 15
Lyne New South Wales 14
Canning Western Australia 14
Source: Bureau of Infrastructure and Transport Research Economics and The Australian Bureau of Statistics, via AAA

AAA managing director Michael Bradley reiterated calls for road safety data to be used to better inform road funding, with an aim to reduce the nation’s road toll.

“Road deaths are up across the nation and have increased in each of the past four years,” Mr Bradley said. 

“But our data shows the road safety crisis is hitting hard outside of our cities and this puts the onus on all political parties to assure Australians that road funding is being directed to the areas where it can save the most lives.

“If this data was made public, people could make their own judgements about whether politicians allocate road funding to save lives or to win votes in marginal electorates.

“It’s a simple, commonsense proposal that would improve road safety while also lifting public confidence in the integrity of government decision-making.”

As previously reported, Australia’s federal, state and territory governments agreed to the 10‑year National Road Safety Strategy in 2021, which has five main targets to reach by 2030:

  • Reducing road deaths by 50 per cent from a 2018–2020 baseline
  • Reducing serious injuries by 30 per cent from a 2018–2020 baseline
  • Zero road deaths of children aged seven years and under 
  • Zero road deaths in city CBD areas
  • Zero road deaths on all national highways and on high-speed roads covering 80 per cent of travel across the network

Australia is currently not on track to meet any of these targets.

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