New law will see drivers fined £200 and given six points if they use their phone

Don’t even TOUCH your mobile at the wheel: New tougher law will see drivers fined £200 and given six points if they use their phone for any reason… but you can access its SatNav if it’s hands-free

  • Drivers face a ban on touching mobile phones at the wheel under a new law 
  • Motorists can currently only be prosecuted if they use devices to call or text  
  • Next year’s law will still allow mobile payments at drive-through restaurants

Drivers face a total ban on touching their mobile phones at the wheel.

Under existing law they can be prosecuted only if they use hand-held devices to call or text.

But from early next year this will extend to touching phones for any reason – such as to take pictures, browse the internet or scroll through a music playlist. 

Motorists will still be able to use their devices as a satnav, but only if hands-free – in other words, using voice commands.

Mobile payments at drive-through restaurants will also be allowed. Hands-free video calls and streaming videos are already banned.

Drivers face a total ban on touching their mobile phones at the wheel. Under existing law they can be prosecuted only if they use hand-held devices to call or text (stock photo)

Offenders will be hit with six points and a £200 fine.

‘The closing of this loophole is very welcome and reflects the multitude of ways drivers can use hand-held phones,’ said Nicholas Lyes of  the RAC. 

‘Use of hand-held mobile phones at the wheel continues to represent a very real road safety risk, so it’s clear more needs to be done to make this as socially unacceptable as drink-driving.

‘It’s important that alongside this change to the law, the Government looks seriously at other options that can help enforce the law, which should include new camera technology that can detect different types of hand-held mobile phone use at the wheel.’

The Mail’s End The Mobile Madness campaign has called for tougher penalties for drivers who recklessly put the lives of others at risk.

To better enforce the law, Highways England has been trialling the use of high- definition cameras that can take pictures of motorists through their windscreens.

Fitted to overhead gantries at secret locations, they use algorithms and artificial intelligence to determine whether the pictures show drivers are using their phones. 

If the trials are a success, images could be sent to police to issue notice of prosecution letters.

Highways England has also been using high-seated HGV cabs driven by police to help catch 250 offenders a month.

A new law will see drivers face a £200 fine and six points for touching their phone for any reason. But motorists will be able to use their devices as a hands-free satnav (stock photo)

A new law will see drivers face a £200 fine and six points for touching their phone for any reason. But motorists will be able to use their devices as a hands-free satnav (stock photo)

Plans for a blanket ban on using mobiles while driving were mooted last November. 

After an 11-month consultation, the Department for Transport has agreed that drivers should face prosecution for touching their phone for any reason.

The ministry has vowed to bring in the change from early next year.

Current rules… and new ones 

Drivers are currently banned from using their phones for the purposes of ‘interactive communication’. This includes:

  • Holding a phone to make a call at the wheel;
  • Holding your phone or touching the screen to send a text or photo, either via SMS or using platforms such as WhatsApp;
  • Holding your phone to send or receive emails;
  • Holding your phone to send a message on social media.

From next year the law will be dramatically expanded to prohibit a wide variety of actions, including, but not limited to:

  • Holding your phone for any reason while driving;
  • Browsing the internet;
  • Using social media or any other phone app;
  • Taking photos at the wheel, even when in stationary traffic;
  • Checking emails and reading text messages;
  • Scrolling through a music playlist;
  • Touching your phone to update the satnav unless your ignition is off;
  • Briefly touching your phone to answer a call.

It follows mounting concern that hand-held mobile use has led to a ‘plateauing’ of deaths and serious injuries. 

Official figures show the rate has remained unchanged since 2010 despite significant improvements in vehicle safety.

Five people die on the roads and 68 are seriously injured every day and incidents are increasingly a result of drivers being distracted by their mobiles.

Research by the University of Leeds and commissioned by the DfT shows the vast majority of mobile interactions involve drivers touching their phones.

The study looked at footage of 51 drivers over 765 trips and observed 662 mobile phone interactions.

Legislation was introduced in 2017 after our campaign highlighted a spate of deaths caused by motorists calling or texting while driving. 

Although the new rules helped deter offenders, drivers have escaped punishment because the law targeted only those using phones for ‘interactive communication’.

There have also been concerns over declining numbers of traffic police available to enforce the rules.

Chief Constable Anthony Bangham, of the National Police Chiefs’ Council, said: ‘Using a mobile phone while driving is incredibly dangerous and being distracted at the wheel can change lives forever. Police will take robust action against those using a hand-held mobile phone illegally and proposals to make the law clearer are welcome.’

A spokesman for Highways England said: ‘We are exploring how technology could be used to detect when drivers are not giving the road their full attention, such as using a mobile phone. Although our roads are amongst the safest in the world, our ambition is that there should be no deaths on our roads.’