Why is fly tipping on the increase?
Why is fly tipping on the increase? Fly-tipping is rising for a messy mix of money, convenience, weak deterrence, and organised waste crime — and the latest England figures show it’s not a small uptick. What the latest numbers suggest (England) Local authorities dealt with around 1.26 million fly-tipping incidents in 2024/25 , up about 9% on 2023/24, with highways (roads/pavements) the most common location and “ small van load ” a very common size category. So: a lot of it is day-to-day household waste and small-scale dumping , not just “industrial villains in hi-vis”. Why it’s increasing 1) It’s often a “fee-avoidance” crime Disposing of waste properly can cost time, effort, and (sometimes) money — so fly-tipping becomes the illegal shortcut. Defra explicitly notes that fly-tipping is often driven by avoiding disposal costs . 2) “Man with a van” scams (rogue waste carriers) A big driver is people paying a cheap, unlicensed collector who then dumps it. Residents think t...