Following an unprecedented winter which saw a spike in the number of pothole reports nationally and locally, more than a million square metres of carriageway in Oxfordshire is set to be treated to reduce the risk of future road defects occurring.
Eighty-seven roads will be improved as part of an £8 million Oxfordshire County Council highway maintenance programme beginning this spring.
The council and its principal highway contractor M Group will be visiting 62 towns and villages between April and June to carry out surface dressing work.
Councillor Andrew Gant, Oxfordshire County Council’s Cabinet Member for Transport Management, said:
“The places with the best roads there are the ones that don’t get potholes in the first place.
“Oxfordshire has some of the busiest roads in the country, with 4.79 billion vehicle miles travelled in 2024. Heavy traffic puts huge strain on road surfaces.
“Reactive pothole repairs are expensive and inefficient. Preventative maintenance, such as surface dressing, is far better value and stops potholes forming in the first place.”
Richard Lovewell, M Group Business Director, said:
“Surface dressing is the most cost-effective and efficient way to increase the life of our roads. It prevents water ingress, improves skid resistance and ultimately protects the carriageway from future potholes.
“We’re proud to be supporting the council in delivering this forward-thinking investment in Oxfordshire’s road network. Delivering a programme of this scale demands real teamwork between the council and M Group working alongside our partners Hazell & Jefferies and Wilson & Scott.
“My thanks go out to everyone involved in pulling this complex programme together and to the crews who will be working tirelessly on the ground.”
(Picture: Oxfordshire County Council)_


















