The City Council has installed ten fixed booths in which the Local Police randomly rotate six mobile speed cameras to conduct speed checks.
Valencia’s main ring roads and avenues now feature a network of ten pole-mounted booths from which the Local Police will be able to deploy their speed cameras on a rotating basis.
The devices will not always be in the same spot: they will be moved periodically to maximize their deterrent effect on the sections with the highest accident rates.
From four to ten booths in less than a year
Until November 2025, the Local Police had four booths and two speed cameras. That month, the City Council acquired two new multi-lane Doppler speed cameras with image capture capabilities and six additional booths, thus completing the current network of ten locations and six speed cameras that are randomly distributed among them.
Where are the booths installed?
The ten checkpoints are distributed along the city’s major thoroughfares:
- Avenida de los Hermanos Machado, at two locations: number 53 (intersection with Vicente Canet, inbound direction) and the intersection with Sant Josep Artesà.
- Avenida del Maestro Rodrigo, near number 84.
- 51 Pío XII Avenue.
- Avenida del Cid, No. 61.
- Camí Nou de Picanya, No. 49.
- Avenida de Fernando Abril Martorell, intersection with Carrera de Malilla.
- Avenida de López Piñero.
- Avenida de Antonio Ferrandis, intersection with Pou Aparisi.
- Avenida de los Naranjos, near number 8.
These are mostly roads with a speed limit of 50 km/h or lower where, according to the Local Police, speeding is commonly observed.
The measure is part of the Vector Plan 2026-2030, the municipal road safety master plan that sets a goal of halving the number of fatal and serious injury accidents before the end of the period.