REVEALED: How much motorists it costs motorists in Offaly in speed van fines
New figures have revealed how much motorists in Offaly have paid in speed van fines over a 30 month period
Figures show that over a 30 month period from January 2023 to June 2025 a staggering €677,680 was collected by speed vans in Offaly. That compares to €435,440 in Laois and a whopping €1,742,000 in Westmeath.
The top ten counties for revenue generation from speed vans were:
Dublin - €6,227,840
Tipperary - €3,322,880
Cork - €2,893,200
Kildare - €2,514,080
Galway - €1,916,640
Wicklow - €1,758,480
Westmeath - €1,742,000
Limerick - €1,411,760
Mayo - €1,385,440
Cavan/Monaghan €1,188,682
Ireland South MEP Cynthia Ní Mhurchú has called for a get-tough approach to those who are caught doing excessive speeds on rural roads. The MEP has called for a greater concentration of speed vans at accident black spots and on our rural roads where speeding is dramatically impacting on road safety.
The EU Transport Committee MEP made her calls as Gardaí released figures to her showing that €32,437,002 has been collected in fines from Garda speed vans between January 2023, and June 8th, 2025. Ní Mhurchú questioned why revenue from speed vans across all garda districts fell by 15.9% between 2023 and 2024.
Garda figures released to Ní Mhurchu also show that Gardaí paid out over €44m euro to private speed camera operators between the start of 2023 and up to August 18, 2025, meaning that the Garda speed van system is operating at an overall loss.
According to Ní Mhurchú, speeding caused the deaths of 52 Irish people in 2024.
“A European Commission report from 2020 estimated that 10 to 15% of all crashes and 30% of all fatal crashes are the direct result of speeding or inappropriate speed. 174 people died on Irish roads in 2024, which means that 52 of those people died as a direct result of speeding (30%). There are 52 families across the country mourning loved ones because we have failed to tackle speeding in any meaningful way”
Ní Mhurchú welcomed an extra €9 million in funding for up to 100 new speed cameras to enhance road safety at the end of 2024 but said that continual investment in new technology is needed to catch those who are flouting the law.
Ní Mhurchú has also called for smarter positioning of our current stock of speed vans to ensure they are located in areas of highest risk of road fatalities. She has also called for consideration of re-education courses as a judicial sanction for drivers who are repeatedly caught speeding.
Subscribe or register today to discover more from DonegalLive.ie
Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.
Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.