
By Chirir Bloom (Nayat Karim)
Motorcycles have become a fixture of daily life in Pakistan, offering an affordable and flexible way for millions to move through crowded streets and rural roads alike. In cities and villages, two-wheelers provide a lifeline for workers, students, and small business owners. Yet, while motorbikes have transformed mobility, their rapid proliferation carries consequences that extend far beyond mere convenience. Social, environmental, and governance challenges are mounting, leaving public safety, urban order, and health under sustained pressure.
Across developing Asia, motorcycles and three-wheeled vehicles dominate roadways, often accounting for up to 95 percent of registered vehicles. Pakistan mirrors this trend. Motorcycles alone make up around 66 percent of the national vehicle fleet, with nearly four million registered units. Yearly sales now surpass 1.2 million, placing Pakistan among the fastest-growing two-wheeler markets in the world. This boom has created jobs, supported the local economy, and enabled mobility for people unable to afford cars. Yet, it has also intensified congestion, pollution, traffic accidents, and lawlessness, revealing the high societal cost of unregulated growth.
The market for motorcycles has expanded at a remarkable pace. Domestic manufacturers dominate, benefiting from low production costs and minimal regulatory oversight. In 2025 alone, sales reached approximately 1.24 million units, representing growth of more than a third over previous years. While this surge supports livelihoods, it has outpaced investments in road safety, urban planning, or public transport infrastructure. The result is a transport system where private convenience frequently trumps public welfare.
The safety risks are stark. Motorcycles account for a disproportionate share of traffic accidents nationwide. In Punjab, more than 70 percent of reported crashes involve motorbikes. Many riders are young, unlicensed, or fail to wear helmets. Reckless riding, informal street racing, and overspeeding are common, putting lives at risk. Hospitals routinely identify motorcycle-related trauma as a leading cause of injury and death among working-age men. National road safety statistics suggest that careless riding by motorcyclists contributes to nearly half of all road accidents.
Beyond accidents, motorcycles contribute to disorder on city streets. Riders frequently flout traffic rules, use pavements as shortcuts, park illegally, and ignore signals, creating hazards for pedestrians and undermining public confidence in traffic governance. Motorbikes have also become a vehicle of choice for petty crime, enabling rapid theft of phones, purses, and other valuables, with offenders easily escaping through congested streets.
Environmental concerns are equally pressing. Poorly maintained engines, illegal modifications, and sheer traffic density exacerbate air and noise pollution. In congested corridors, motorcycles contribute to public health challenges linked to respiratory illness and declining urban quality of life. In this regard, Pakistan’s cities are following a pattern seen across Asia, where two-wheeler dependence becomes both a convenience and a hazard.
Vietnam provides a cautionary tale. For years, motorcycles comprised nearly 85–90 percent of vehicles in cities like Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. Severe congestion, rising accidents, and air pollution prompted the government to adopt a long-term transition strategy. Measures included strict traffic enforcement, phased restrictions on motorcycles in city centers, heavy investment in metro and bus rapid transit systems, and a gradual shift toward electric mobility. Hanoi now plans to ban gasoline-powered motorcycles from central districts by the 2030s, contingent on the availability of public transport alternatives. The Vietnamese example demonstrates that it is possible to reduce motorcycle dependence without undermining mobility—provided restrictions are gradual, context-specific, and supported by viable alternatives.
Pakistan faces a similar crossroads. Policymakers must act to balance mobility with safety, health, and order. A comprehensive approach is needed, combining governance, regulation, and investment. Licensing must be enforced, helmet use mandatory, and speed limits monitored consistently through digital systems and automated fines. Fiscal measures, including gradual increases in registration fees, insurance requirements, and targeted taxes, can fund road safety initiatives and public transport expansion. Public transport development is central to any solution. Metro links, electric bus networks, and rapid transit systems are essential to reducing dependence on private two-wheelers. Once these alternatives are functional, phased restrictions on conventional motorcycle use in congested urban areas can be introduced, mirroring Vietnam’s successful model.
(The writer is a development and humanitarian practitioner and an independent researcher based in Islamabad. He writes on social and humanitarian issues under his brand name, ChirirBloom, and can be reached at editorial@metro-morning.com)

