Road safety cameras

The road safety camera program aims to create safer roads for all road users.

The road safety camera program is a key part of our commitment to road safety.

Road safety cameras are used across the state to improve driver behaviour and create safer roads. Speed cameras and red light cameras have been shown to reduce injury crashes by up to 47 per cent at Victorian intersections.

The program runs in partnership between:

Victoria Police enforce infringements issued under the program to:

Victoria Police commit to the Victorian Road Safety Strategy 2021-2030 . The strategy aims to halve road deaths and reduce serious injuries by 2030. It put us on the path to eliminate road deaths by 2050.

Types of road safety cameras

Speed cameras

Speed cameras are one of the most effective tools to prevent road trauma.

Speed contributes to around one third of Victoria's road deaths and serious injuries. Many of these occur on high-speed rural roads, which make up o ver 40% of all deaths and 20% of all serious injuries.

A small increase in speed can increase the risk of a collision. Even if the main cause of a collision is not speed, the impact will be less severe in a slower vehicle. The chance of survival is much greater the slower you are driving.

There are three types of speed camera systems:

For more information, visit Cameras Save Lives .

Victoria Police officers carry out other speed enforcement measures to help save lives. This includes:

Red light cameras

Red light cameras aim to deter drivers from driving through red lights.

Red light cameras operate at traffic intersections in Melbourne and some country areas.

Twenty per cent of all casualty collisions occur at major intersections in metropolitan areas. Most of these have traffic signals.

For more information about red light cameras, visit Cameras Save Lives .

Mobile phone and seatbelt detection cameras

Mobile phone and seat belt detection cameras detect:

Driver distraction from the use of portable devices is a major contributor to road trauma.

For more information about the cameras, visit Cameras Save Lives .

For information about mobile phone and technology use while driving, visit Transport Victoria .