GovWire

Official Statistics: Daily domestic transport use by mode

Department For Transport

February 14
09:30 2024

Our statistical practice is regulated by the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR). OSR sets the standards of trustworthiness, quality and value in the Code of Practice for Statistics that all producers of official statistics should adhere to. You are welcome to contact us directly by emailing transport statistics with any comments about how we meet these standards.

The National Rail (including Elizabeth Line) timeseries was temporarily withdrawn from the published data tables in the November 2023 and December 2023 releases, due to a data quality issue. The timeseries was reinstated in the January 2024 release, using a new methodology, which mitigates the effects of this issue.

The National Rail Excluding Elizabeth Line time series, not affected by this issue nor by the methodology change.

More information about this issue can be found in the methodology note above.

These statistics on transport use are published monthly.

For each day, the Department for Transport (DfT) produces statistics on domestic transport:

  1. road traffic in Great Britain
  2. rail passenger journeys in Great Britain
  3. Transport for London (TfL) tube and bus routes
  4. bus travel in Great Britain (excluding London)

The associated methodology notes set out information on the data sources and methodology used to generate these headline measures.

From September 2023, these statistics include a second rail usage time series which excludes Elizabeth Line service (and other relevant services that have been replaced by the Elizabeth line) from both the travel week and its equivalent baseline week in 2019. This allows for a more meaningful like-for-like comparison of rail demand across the period because the effects of the Elizabeth Line on rail demand are removed. More information can be found in the methodology document.

The table below provides the reference of regular statistics collections published byDfTon these topics, with their last and upcoming publication dates.

Mode Publication and link Latest period covered and next publication
Road traffic Road traffic statistics Full annual data up to December 2022 was published in July 2023.

Quarterly data up to June 2023 was published September 2023.
Rail usage The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) publishes a range of statistics including passenger and freight rail performance and usage. Statistics are available at the ORR website



Statistics for rail passenger numbers and crowding on weekdays in major cities in England and Wales are published by DfT
ORRs latest quarterly rail usage statistics, covering January to March 2023, was published in June 2023

DfTs most recent annual passenger numbers and crowding statistics for 2022 were published in July 2023.
Bus usage Bus statistics The most recent annual publication covered the year ending March 2022.

The most recent quarterly publication covered January to March 2023.
TfL tube and bus usage Data on buses is covered by the section above. Station level business data is available.
Cycling usage Walking and cycling statistics, England 2022 calendar year published August 2023.
Cross Modal and journey by purpose National Travel Survey 2022 calendar year data published in August 2023.
Published 3 June 2020
Last updated 14 February 2024 +show all updates
  1. Domestic transport use by mode updated with the latest monthly data

  2. Domestic transport use by mode updated to the latest monthly data.

  3. Updated text and data tables for the latest monthly data.

  4. COVID monthly statistics updated.

  5. Updated text and data tables for the latest monthly data.

  6. Updated text and data tables for the latest monthly data.

  7. Data is updated for the latest month.

  8. Data is updated for the latest month.

  9. Data is updated for the latest month.

  10. Latest monthly data updated.

  11. Updated publication with latest data.

  12. Published latest version of statistics.

Related Articles

Comments

  1. We don't have any comments for this article yet. Why not join in and start a discussion.

Write a Comment

Your name:
Your email:
Comments:

Post my comment

Recent Comments

Follow Us on Twitter

Share This


Enjoyed this? Why not share it with others if you've found it useful by using one of the tools below: