List of motorways in the United Kingdom

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

UK motorways in 2022
  M-designated motorway
  Upgraded A-road designation

This list of motorways in the United Kingdom is a complete list of

motorways in the United Kingdom. Note that the numbering scheme used for Great Britain does not include roads in Northern Ireland, which are allocated numbers on an ad hoc basis.[1]

Great Britain

M-designated motorways

Link Route Ceremonial counties (England)
Council areas (Scotland)
Principal areas (Wales)
Highest junction to junction average daily vehicle flow 2019[2] Length
mi km
M1 A south-north motorway linking London to Leeds. Greater London, Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Northamptonshire, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire 168,763 193.5 311.4
M2 A west-east motorway bypassing Medway, Sittingbourne and Faversham. Kent 106,582 25.7 41.4
M3 A northeast-southwest motorway linking London to Southampton. Surrey, Hampshire 136,059 58.6 94.3
M4 An east-west motorway linking London to Cardiff and South Wales. 161,807 189 304
M5 A northeast-southwest motorway in
Exeter
.
West Midlands, Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Bristol, Somerset, Devon 127,584 162.9 262.2
M6 A southeast-northwest motorway linking the West Midlands to North West England. Leicestershire, Warwickshire, West Midlands, Staffordshire, Cheshire, Merseyside, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Cumbria 173,201 232.2 373.7
M6 Toll A tolled bypass of the M6 in the West Midlands. West Midlands, Staffordshire, Warwickshire 110,489 27 43
M8 An east-west motorway linking Edinburgh to Glasgow. Edinburgh, West Lothian, North Lanarkshire, Glasgow, Renfrewshire 160,484 60.3 97.0
M9 A southeast-northwest motorway linking Edinburgh to Stirling. Edinburgh, West Lothian, Falkirk, Stirling 68,143 33.0 53.1
M11 A southwest-northeast motorway linking London to Cambridge. Greater London, Essex, Cambridgeshire 121,964 55.0 88.5
M18 A southwest-northeast motorway linking the M1 to the M62. South Yorkshire, East Riding of Yorkshire 108,855 26.5 42.6
M20 A west-east motorway linking
Folkestone and the Channel Tunnel
.
Kent 120,348 50.6 81.4
M23 A north-south motorway linking London to Gatwick Airport and Crawley. Surrey, West Sussex 110,574 15.9 25.6
M25 A ring road of London numbered clockwise from Dartford. Kent, Surrey, Berkshire, Greater London, Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire, Essex 216,108 117 188
M26 An east-west motorway linking the M25 to the M20. Kent 70,674 9.9 15.9
M27 A west-east motorway linking Southampton to Portsmouth. Hampshire 134,210 25.0 40.2
M32 A spur from the M4 into central Bristol. Gloucestershire, Bristol 84,898 4.4 7.1
M40 A southeast-northwest motorway linking London to Birmingham. Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, Northamptonshire, Warwickshire 133,490 89.0 143.2
M42 A quarter-ring road numbered anti-clockwise bypassing Birmingham to the south, east and southeast. Worcestershire, Warwickshire, West Midlands, Leicestershire 154,532 40.0 64.4
M45 A spur from the M1 to Rugby. Warwickshire, Northamptonshire 19,536 7.9 12.7
M48 An alternative route to the M4 between Bristol and Caldicot. Gloucestershire, Monmouthshire 22,632 12 19
M49 Bypasses Bristol to the west. Bristol, Gloucestershire 22,461 5.0 8.0
M50 A west-east motorway between the M5 and Ross-on-Wye. Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire 32,032 21.6 34.8
M53 A north-south motorway linking central
Chester
.
Merseyside, Cheshire 79,872 18.9 30.4
M54 An east-west motorway linking Wolverhampton to Telford. Staffordshire, Shropshire 70,652 23.0 37.0
M55 An east-west motorway linking Preston to Blackpool. Lancashire 84,905 12.2 19.6
M56 A west-east motorway linking
Chester
.
Greater Manchester, Cheshire 174,693 33.3 53.6
M57 An eastern bypass of Liverpool linking the M62 to Maghull. Merseyside 99,521 10 16
M58 A west-east motorway linking Liverpool to Wigan. Merseyside, Lancashire, Greater Manchester 49,376 12 19
M60 A ring road of Manchester numbered clockwise from Stockport. Greater Manchester 180,501 36 58
M61 A north-south motorway linking Preston to Manchester. Greater Manchester, Lancashire 150,331 20.0 32.2
M62 A west-east motorway linking Liverpool to Hull. Merseyside, Cheshire, Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, North Yorkshire, East Riding of Yorkshire 161,700 107 172
M65 A west-east motorway linking Preston to Colne. Lancashire 82,970 25.8 41.5
M66 A north-south motorway linking Ramsbottom to Manchester. Lancashire, Greater Manchester 111,851 8.0 12.9
M67 A west-east motorway linking Manchester to Hadfield. Greater Manchester 58,435 5.0 8.0
M69 A northeast-southwest motorway linking Leicester to Coventry. Warwickshire, Leicestershire 64,828 15.7 25.3
M73 An eastern bypass of Glasgow. North Lanarkshire, Glasgow, South Lanarkshire 95,331 7.0 11.3
M74
A northwest-southeast motorway linking
A74(M) south of Abington
.
Glasgow, North Lanarkshire, South Lanarkshire 107,475 40 60
M77 A north-south motorway linking Glasgow to Kilmarnock. Glasgow, East Renfrewshire, East Ayrshire 94,151 20.0 32.2
M80 A southwest-northeast motorway linking Glasgow to Stirling. Glasgow, North Lanarkshire, Falkirk, Stirling 104,305 25.0 40.2
M90 A south-north motorway linking Edinburgh to Perth. Edinburgh, Fife, Perth and Kinross 76,503 36.0 57.9
M180 A west-east motorway linking Thorne to Grimsby. Continues as the A180 after the exit for the Humber Bridge. South Yorkshire, Lincolnshire 48,780 25.0 40.2
M181 A spur of the M180 leading to Scunthorpe. Lincolnshire 18,213 2.0 3.2
M271 A spur of the M27 bypassing Southampton to the west. Hampshire 53,678 2.3 3.7
M275 A spur from the M27 to central Portsmouth. 86,291 2.0 3.2
M602 A west-east motorway linking the M62 to Salford. Greater Manchester 73,292 4.0 6.4
M606 A spur from the
Bradford
.
West Yorkshire 77,277 3.0 4.8
M621 An east-west motorway linking Leeds to the M1 and M62. 103,207 7.7 12.4
M876 A southwest-northeast motorway linking Bonnybridge to Kincardine. Falkirk 42,611 8.0 12.9
M898 A spur from the M8 leading to Erskine Bridge. Renfrewshire 51,831 0.5 0.8

Upgraded A-road designations

Link Route Ceremonial counties (England)
Council areas (Scotland)
Principal areas (Wales)
Highest junction to junction average daily vehicle flow 2019[2]
A1(M) A south-north motorway split into four sections: Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Nottinghamshire, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, North Yorkshire, County Durham, Tyne and Wear 143,012
A3(M) A north-south motorway linking the A3 to the A27 near Portsmouth. Hampshire 92,989
A8(M) A spur from the
Ballieston
.
Glasgow 10,586
A38(M) A spur from the M6 to central Birmingham. West Midlands 146,908
A48(M) A spur from the M4 to central Cardiff. Newport, Cardiff 47,203
A57(M)
Forms part of a ring road of Manchester. Also known as the Mancunian Way. Greater Manchester 90,785
A58(M) Forms the western part of the Leeds inner ring road. West Yorkshire 81,647
A64(M) Forms the eastern part of the Leeds inner ring road. 43,617
A66(M) A spur from the
A66 near Darlington
.
North Yorkshire 15,337
A74(M) A northwest-southeast motorway linking the
M74 to North West England. Continues as the M6
.
South Lanarkshire, Dumfries and Galloway, Cumbria 41,662
A167(M) An urban motorway in
Newcastle-Upon-Tyne
.
Tyne and Wear 63,911
A194(M) A south-north motorway linking the A1(M) to the Tyne Tunnel. 42,802
A308(M) A spur from the M4 to Bray. Berkshire 23,541
A329(M) A southeast-northwest motorway linking
Bracknell to Reading
.
69,520
A404(M)
A spur from the M4 to High Wycombe. Continues as the A404 west of Maidenhead. 59,816
A627(M) A south-north motorway linking Rochdale to Chadderton. Greater Manchester 55,749
A823(M) A spur from the M90 to Dunfermline. Fife 20,363
A1077(M)
A spur from the M181 to Scunthorpe. Lincolnshire 18,213

Former motorways

Roads which used to be motorways but have been downgraded:

Link Description
M10 A short spur northwest bound and southeast bound linking St Albans to the M1 near Hemel Hempstead. After 50 years as a motorway spur, it was downgraded to the A414 in 2009 due to widening of the M1 between the M25 and Luton.
M15 The designation for the
North Circular Road
).
M41 The London West Cross Route, a spur from the London Westway (A40(M)) and the only part of the western section of the London Motorway Box to be built; downgraded to the A3220 in 2000.[3]
A36(M) Claimed number for the spur at M27 J2. Initially part of the M27 until the Totton Western Bypass opened after which it was downgraded to an extension of the A36. The A36(M) designation was never used; the route was simply named as a spur of the M27.
A40(M) The London Westway, downgraded to the A40 in 2000.[3]
A41(M) The Tring bypass, downgraded to the A41 in 1987.
A46(M) A spur towards
A5460
in 1976 due to completion of the M69.
A102(M) The London East Cross Route, in two sections:
A329(M) The northern third of the A329(M) from Winnersh to Reading was downgraded to the A3290 in the early 1990s to permit Reading council to dedicate one lane for buses.
A601(M) The southern part (single carriageway link to the B6254) is now the B6601. Downgraded in 2020 to enable access to adjacent development.[4] The remainder of the route was downgraded to the A6070 in 2023.[5]
A6144(M) Formerly the longest single-carriageway motorway spur in the United Kingdom from the
A6144
in 2006.

Motorways that have been renumbered

Link Description
M16 Northern and western sections of Ringway 3; completed sections are now part of the M25.
M52 Planned as a Liverpool-to-Manchester motorway; nearly all of it opened as part of the M62 cross-country route, and a short section as the M64 (later M602) in Manchester.
M62 Originally planned to be the western loop around Manchester and Salford; became part of the M63 before the western extension of the M62 was opened; now the M60 J7-J13.
M63 Manchester South Orbital; merged with parts of the M62 and M66 in 1999 to form the new M60 Manchester orbital motorway.
M64 Eccles Bypass, formerly part of the M52; it was not considered important enough to carry a two-digit number (and it had not yet opened) and was redesignated as M602.
M65 Gildersome to Leeds Motorway; not considered important enough (and it had not yet opened) to carry a two-digit number, it was redesignated as M621.
M68 Allocated to the southern and eastern sections of the Manchester Outer Ring Road. The eastern section became a portion of the M66 when it opened north of the M62 in the early 1970s and was renumbered to M60 J18-19 in 1998 while the southern section was eventually dropped altogether by 2010.
M85 Renumbered to M90 J10-11 in 1994. Previously the M90 carried on along the spur into Perth, leaving the main route ahead as the M85.
M531 Ellesmere Port Motorway; was the A5032 before 1975. Now the M53 J5-10.
A1(M) Central Motorway East; became the A6127(M) when the A1 was rerouted to run through the Tyne Tunnel. Now the
A167(M)
.
A2(M) Provisional number for the Medway Motor Road, a bypass of Chatham, Gillingham and Rochester. Changed to M2 as a result of an article in the 15 December 1959 edition of The Daily Telegraph.
A4(M) Maidenhead Bypass; became a portion of the
A404(M)
. A small section was abandoned.
A5(M) Provisional number for the Wellington Bypass, redesignated as the M54 before construction was complete.
A8(M) Provisional number for the Renfrew Bypass, now part of the M8.
A14(M) Secretive (unsigned) motorway linking the A14 and A1(M) near Huntingdon. Documents referred the route as A14(M) or A604(M). Became a part of A1(M) when the A14(M) designation was moved to the Huntingdon-Cambridge section of the A14.
A18(M) A spur from the M18 to the A18 north of Doncaster. Mostly now part of the M180, although a section has been abandoned.
A20(M) Maidstone Bypass; now the M20 J5-8.
A21(M) Disputed, secret number for the section of the A21 Sevenoaks bypass that became the M25 in 1986.
A23(M) Original number of the M23.
A40(M) Provisional number for the High Wycombe and Beaconsfield bypasses. The Beaconsfield bypass was changed to M40 before it opened. It is not clear when the High Wycombe bypass was renumbered, but it too is now the M40.
A48(M) Morriston Bypass; now the M4 J44-46.
A48(M) Port Talbot Bypass; now the M4 J39-41.
A50 Provisional number for the M1.
A62(M) Original designation for the Leeds Southeastern Urban Motorway, now the M621.
A65(M) Erroneous designation for the A64(M), either a map error or a deliberate trap street.
A185(M) Map error for A194(M), appearing in a 1969 map. Number officially never used.
A423(M) Originally A4(M) and then part of the
A404(M)
.
A446(M) Provisional number for the M6 Toll.
A638(M) Provisional number for the M606.
A1231(M) Unsigned spur from the A1(M) near Washington services. Now part of the A195(M), also unsigned.
A6127(M) Originally A1(M); now the
A167(M)
.

Motorways under construction or planned

The

A1(M)
stretch of motorway.

In addition, the proposal to put a tunnel under the River Thames to the east of Dartford Crossing and the revived Birmingham Western Orbital plans are both described as motorways.[6][7]

Unbuilt motorways

There have been many plans for motorways in the UK that have not been built. Below is a list of plans that were not built (not exhaustive):

Many cities had urban motorway plans, most of which were not built. London,[14] Newcastle,[15] Liverpool,[16] Manchester/SELNEC and Glasgow[16] all had extensive plans.

Northern Ireland

M-designated motorways

Link Route Council areas
M1 Linking Belfast to Dungannon. Belfast, Lisburn and Castlereagh, Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon, Mid Ulster
M2 In two sections, one linking Belfast to Antrim, and the other bypassing Ballymena. The section in between was planned, but never built. Belfast, Antrim and Newtownabbey, Mid and East Antrim
M3 Linking the M2 in north Belfast to the A2 Sydenham Bypass in east Belfast. Belfast
M5 Linking the M2 in north Belfast to Newtownabbey. Belfast, Antrim and Newtownabbey
M12
A spur from the M1 near Derrymacash to the north of Portadown. Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon
M22 Linking the M2 at Antrim to Randalstown. Antrim and Newtownabbey

Upgraded A-road designations

Link Route Council areas
A8(M) A spur from the M2 near Glengormley to the A8 north-west of Newtownabbey. Antrim and Newtownabbey

Unbuilt motorways

The following motorways were planned, but never built:

  • M4, from Belfast south to Carryduff, where the roads to Newcastle and Downpatrick split. Bypasses the A24 Ormeau Road.[17]
  • M6, branching off the M5 and heading north to Larne.[17]
  • M7, bypassing the A20 between central Belfast and Dundonald, with plans to extend it to Newtownards. Ran along an old railway line.[17]
  • M8 Belfast Southern Link, ran along the Lagan Valley from the M1 at Belfast to the M4 at Stranmillis, intended to distribute traffic heading from Lisburn to Belfast, taking traffic heading to North Down and East Belfast off the M1 before M11 traffic from Newry and northern Lisburn merged in. Cancelled in 1969 due to poor traffic estimates and the removal of a section of the M4 north of Stranmillis.[17]
  • M11, from the M1 going through Lisburn and then crossing the M1 again and ending at Newry. Intended to be the main route for Dublin, bypassing the A1. Not seen as important, being one of the lowest priorities for construction and relied on Craigavon plans for a new large city being built. Cancelled in 1969; the A1 was upgraded instead.[17]
  • M21 Belfast Airport Motorway, number reserved for a motorway to Belfast Airport.
  • M23, from the M2 to Derry.[17]

There were also urban motorway plans for Belfast.[18][17]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Northern Ireland Assembly – WRITTEN ANSWERS Friday 15 December 2000". Archived from the original on 23 December 2008. Retrieved 19 November 2007.
  2. ^ a b "GB Road Traffic Counts". Archived from the original on 1 October 2019. Retrieved 13 January 2019.
  3. ^ a b c Under its charter, motorways are excluded from the remit of Transport for London. These routes had their motorway status removed to allow TfL control over them.
  4. ^ "The Lancashire County Council (A601(M) Partial Revocation) Scheme 2019 Confirmation Instrument 2020".
  5. ^ "The end of the A601(M) | Roads.org.uk". www.roads.org.uk. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  6. ^ "Lower Thames Crossing Statutory Consultation - Highways England - Citizen Space". highwaysengland.citizenspace.com.
  7. ^ Elkes, Neil (6 June 2018). "Revealed: New bypass plan to end M6 and M5 traffic misery". birminghammail.
  8. ^ "A556 Knutsford to Bowden improvement scheme". costain.com.
  9. ^ "TransPennine: "Go the whole way, complete the M67, with a tunnel underneath"". 9 November 2014.
  10. ^ "A road to the past: Salford's unbuilt motorway that would have destroyed landmarks and neighbourhoods". Salford Now. 7 March 2023.
  11. ^ "Plans for part of A14 upgrade to become a motorway". GOV.UK. Retrieved 7 October 2018.
  12. ^ "New A14 bypass to open a year early". GOV.UK. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  13. ^ "EuroRoute". Roads.org.uk.
  14. ^ CBRD Histories: London Ringways Archived 18 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Pathetic Motorways". pathetic.org.uk.
  16. ^ a b "Articles". Roads.org.uk.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g "History - Northern Ireland Motorway Plans - Northern Ireland Roads Site". www.wesleyjohnston.com.
  18. ^ "History - Belfast Urban Motorway and A12 Westlink - Northern Ireland Roads Site". www.wesleyjohnston.com.