Max Speed limit values in miles per hour. This data is an extract from the Geospatial Roadway Inventory Databse (GRID), which is TxDOT's system for managing roadway assets in Texas.Note: Extracts from GRID are made on a regular basis and reflect the state of the data at that moment. Assets on routes that are in the process of being edited may be affected.Update Frequency: 1 MonthsSource: Geospatial Roadway Inventory Database (GRID)Security Level: PublicOwned by TxDOT: TrueRelated LinksData Dictionary PDF [Generated 2025/04/24]
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Esri ArcGIS Online (AGOL) Hosted, View Feature Layer which provides access to the MDOT SHA Roadway Posted Speed Limit Signs data product.MDOT SHA Roadway Posted Speed Limit Signs data consists of point geometric features which represent the geographic locations of posted speed limit signs along MDOT SHA-maintained roadways throughout the State of Maryland. This layer is a hosted, view layer showing only Posted Speed Limit signage from the comprehensive MDOT SHA Roadway Sign Inventory. Roadway signs that share a sign support structure will be represented as stacked geometry.MDOT SHA Roadway Sign Inventory data is owned by the MDOT SHA Office of Traffic & Safety (OOTS). This data is currently updated on an annual basis. This is the latest version of the data, which was last updated in November 2019 (11/04/2019).MDOT SHA Roadway Sign Inventory data is published on ArcGIS Online for Maryland as a publicly available Hosted Feature Layer with Non-Restricted Access. Download / Export of the data is available in a variety of formats.For additional information, contact MDOT SHA OIT Enterprise Information Services:GIS@mdot.maryland.gov
This map provides information on speed limits that are posted on state-maintained roadways in Virginia. Cities and towns set their own speed limits and these are not available to show on the map. Zoom in on the map to display the speed limits. Speed limits exist for all roads however; where this information is not available for mapping, they are not displayed. Most roads where speed limits are not shown are either rural, secondary roads (routes numbered 600 or greater) where a statutory 55 mph speed limit typically applies, or subdivision streets where a statutory 25 mph speed limit usually applies. These statutory speed limits are often are not posted on these roads. Click on any roadway to display the speed limit information.
Roadway Posted Speed Limit Signs data consists of point feature geometry which represents the geographic location of posted speed limit signs along public roadways in the State of Maryland. PLEASE NOTE: This layer is now deprecated as of September, 2020 and will be removed in September 2021.Data has been replaced with the following https://maryland.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=7549d74e31df427a82a64ab5a19d74e3#overviewRoadway Posted Speed Limit Signs data is developed as part of the Highway Performance Monitoring System (HPMS) which maintains and reports transportation related information to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) on an annual basis. HPMS is maintained by the Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration (MDOT SHA), under the Office of Planning and Preliminary Engineering (OPPE) Data Services Division (DSD). This data is used by various business units throughout MDOT, as well as many other Federal, State and local government agencies. Roadway Posted Speed Limit Signs data is key to understanding the location of posted speed limit signs throughout the State of Maryland. Roadway Posted Speed Limit Signs data is updated and published on an annual basis for the prior year. This data is for the year 2017.For additional information, contact the MDOT SHA Geospatial Technologies Email: GIS@mdot.state.md.us For additional information related to the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) Website: https://www.mdot.maryland.gov/ For additional information related to the Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration (MDOT SHA) Website: https://roads.maryland.gov/Home.aspx Data Legal Disclaimer: The Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration (MDOT SHA) makes no warranty, expressed or implied, as to the use or appropriateness of geospatial data, and there are no warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or use. The information contained in geospatial data is from publicly available sources, but no representation is made as to the accuracy or completeness of geospatial data. MDOT SHA shall not be subject to liability for human error, error due to software conversion, defect, or failure of machines, or any material used in the connection with the machines, including tapes, disks, CD-ROMs or DVD-ROMs and energy. MDOT SHA shall not be liable for any lost profits, consequential damages, or claims against MDOT SHA by third parties.This is a MD iMAP hosted service layer. Find more information at https://imap.maryland.gov.Feature Service Link:https://geodata.md.gov/imap/rest/services/Transportation/MD_RoadwayPostedSpeedLimits/FeatureServer/0
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Displays Speed Limit Ordinances for the City of Tucson. Created by copying features from stnetall.PurposeLine Layer that shows the speed limits of streets in Tucson.Dataset ClassificationLevel 0 - OpenKnown UsesUsed in Various Web MapsKnown ErrorsUrban streets from 12000 scale & rural streets from 100000 scale; 1/3 streets rectified to parcel base. 10/2013: While this layer is maintained as a Shapefile, the coverage format is still required for certain nightly processing. Data ContactDepartment of Transportation and MobilityUpdate FrequencyUpdated as needed
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This dynamic map service provodes a a linear representation of speed limit changes based on signs in the field or speed zones established by an Official Order.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This map contains speed limits for all roads in the National Road Database (NWB).
Description from Rijkswaterstaat: "Since 2022, the features are Trees, Entrances, Bowl Boundaries, Parking Points , Parking spaces, Traffic center, Traffic types, Road width, Road categorization and Road narrowings added as a csv file to the database."
"The possible speeds that can be entered are 5, 15, 20, 30 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 120, 130 km per hour, N/A and unknown. The speeds only apply to roads that are open to car traffic. On cycle paths , footpaths and other roads that are not open to car traffic, the speed is unknown. This also applies to the ferry connections. The file provides variable maximum speeds with a start time and an end time. These mainly apply to motorways. Outside this period with the indicated start time and end time, an alternative speed applies. So, for example, between 6:00 AM and 7:00 PM the speed limit is 100 km per hour and outside of that the maximum speed is 120 km per hour."
Traffic decisions, via the Knowledge and Operation Center for Official Government Publications (KOOP), are used to detect and process changes in speed limits.
Disclaimer:
A number of roads are currently still listed as "unknown" while the speed limit does not actually apply here (pedestrian paths and cycle paths, for example).
< p>The map may contain inaccuracies. You can report errors via data@eindhoven.nl.Source:
We keep track of speeds within a tool from the National Road Traffic Data Portal (NDW). You can view the map that the NDW offers via: https:// weghouden.ndw.nu/weghouden/wegvakken/323165013/bedrijven/maximumspeed. You can also download the data in shapefile format via https://opendata.ndw.nu/ .
To unlock the speeds within our Eindhoven Open Data portal we use a service from Rijkswaterstaat: https:// geo.rijkswaterstaat.nl/arcgis/rest/services/GDR/maximum_speeds_roads/FeatureServer/0
You can obtain more information and different publication formats from the Rijkswaterstaat data source via: https://maps.rijkswaterstaat.nl/dataregister-publicatie/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/ d7df2888-0c0d-40f1-9b35-3c1a01234d01
Geospatial data about City of Dallas, Texas Speed Limits. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
https://data.gov.tw/licensehttps://data.gov.tw/license
The data on provincial highway speed limit signs (Category 5 signs) is exported from the Highway Basic Data Database of the Highway Bureau. In addition to CSV format, the bureau also provides the facility information in KMZ format for reference.
The road characteristics database (WKD) for speeds contains speed limits for all roads in the NWB. At the beginning of 2017, WKD was filled for the whole of the Netherlands with data supplied by municipalities. From that moment on, the new traffic decrees, via the Knowledge and Exploitation Center for Official Government Publications (KOOP), have been used to detect and process changes in speed limits. The NWB changes faster than the speed limits are supplied by the road authorities or are placed in KOOP. Algorithms are used to supplement the speed where necessary at short intermediate road sections. As a result, the speed limit is unknown for a few percent. Since 2022, the characteristics Trees, Entrances, Bowl boundaries, Parking points, Parking spaces, Traffic center, Traffic types, Road width, Road categorization and Road narrows have been added to the database as a csv file. These can be downloaded from https://downloads.rijkswaterstaatdata.nl/wkd/. Documentation about the wkd features can also be found here. NB: In residential areas where a maximum speed of 30 km per hour applies, or a residential area, this leads to major deviations from reality. Since 2017, the number of rural roads with a 60 km limit has also increased sharply. The possible speeds that can be entered are 5, 15, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 120, 130 km/h and unknown. The speeds only apply to roads that are open to car traffic. On bicycle paths, footpaths and other roads that are not open to car traffic, the speed is entered as unknown. This also applies to the ferry connections. The file provides variable speed limits with a start time and an end time. These apply in particular to motorways. Outside this period with the indicated start time and end time, an alternative speed will apply. So for example between 06:00 and 19:00 100 km/h applies and outside that time the maximum speed is 120 km/h. The road characteristic database for speeds also contains the recommended speeds that apply to a particular road section or part thereof. More information and news about the NWB can be found at https://nationaalwegendossier.nl/
This service provides lines representing posted speed limits along centerlines of North Carolina state-maintained roads. This data comes from traffic ordinances governing speed limit; where there is no ordinance, the speed limit is 35 within municipalities and 55 outside. The N.C. Department of Transportation sets the speed limit for all state-maintained roads, including access-controlled highways, which are highways with medians that require drivers to enter or exit only at interchanges with bridges, inside the town or city limits. For other state-maintained roads within the municipal limits, NCDOT and the town or city must concur before changing the speed limit. Roads are designed for a specific speed. NCDOT may review the speed limit for various reasons, such as part of a study to improve highway safety, or for proposed new developments. Citizens and local officials may also request NCDOT to conduct a speed zone study to determine whether a road has the appropriate speed limits and signage.The department considers several factors when adjusting the speed limit, such as:Alignment of the roadwayTypes of development along the roadwayThe density, or number, of driveways on a corridorHow far one can see the roadCrash historyVarious speed dataOne of the most common types of speed data NCDOT uses is based on the speed at or below which 85 percent of drivers are traveling. NCDOT uses the 85th percentile to help avoid posting speed limits that are artificially low, which can become difficult to enforce. In the absence of strict enforcement, most people drive at the speed they are comfortable with, regardless of the speed limit.MetadataThe metadata for the contained layer of the NCDOT Speed Limit Service is available through the following link:Speed LimitPoint of Contact North Carolina Department of Information Technology -Transportation, GIS UnitGIS Data and Services ConsultantContact information:gishelp@ncdot.govCentury Center – Building B1020 Birch Ridge DriveRaleigh, NC 27610Hours of service: 9:00am - 5:00pm Monday – FridayContact instructions: Please send an email with any issues, questions, or comments regarding the Speed Limit data. If it is an immediate need, please indicate as such in the subject line in an email.NCDOT GIS Unit GO! NC Product TeamLastUpdated: 2024-01-01 00:00:00
This data set is a linear representation of the extents and attribution associated with speed limit as derived from speed zone records as originally created by the Traffic Engineering Division (TED) of VDOT. This data layer was created for Speed Zone application of Roadway Network System by extracting the zone location information for each feature from the speed zone database and then applying this location description to the linear referencing system built for the Virginia roadway network, and then associating the zone business data to the spatially located feature. Over time new speed zones are created that may overlap - supersede an existing zone. This layer uses business rules to calculate the speed limit. A conventional zone and a variable limit may exist at a single selected location. This data set is maintained by RNS application. There are two types of SPZ records first are for "Statutory" zones where signs are erected to mark roads on which the statutory speed limits apply. The second type of zone is "Resolution" in which the VDOT Commissioner approves changes in speed limits based on recommendations from TED following traffic studies at the proposed location. In these cases the speed limit may be set to any recommended value, in 5 mph increments, and with differing speed limits for trucks versus other vehicles, different speed limits based on time of day, etc.
This layer contains the traffic regulatory signs, such as speed limit, no left turns, weight restrictions and other signs for motorists on the streets of Los Angeles.
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Speed limit information for most of Queensland's roads. Includes state and locally controlled roads. Point-in-time data as per date of collection in dataset.
ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
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A. SUMMARY Maximum speed limits per street segment for the City of San Francisco. Speed limits are indicated primarily for streets that have speeds greater than 25 MPH, unless the speed limit has been changed from a higher speed or a speed survey has been conducted to enforce the de facto speed limit of 25 MPH. 25 MPH is the de fact speed limit for most residential and commercial streets, and apply to streets on this map denoted by a 0 MPH label. Alleys narrower than 25 feet can have de facto speed limits of 15 MPH. B. METHODOLOGY Speed limit legislation information is taken from MTAB legislation and in some cases directives from engineers in the 5212 classification. Speed limit implementation information is taken from SSD Shops Reports and then parsed via python code. Implementation for speed limits will specify when signs are put in stating the new speed limits, and the work order that the sign installation was spec'd in. C. UPDATE FREQUENCY Updated quarterly or on an as need basis by request
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The FDOT GIS Roads with Maximum Speed Limits feature class provides spatial information Maximum Speed Limits on Florida Roadways.
Source: http://www.dot.state.fl.us/planning/statistics/gis
Disclaimer: This product has been compiled from the most accurate source data from the Florida Department of Transportation's Transportation Statistics Office. However, this product is for reference purposes only and is not to be construed as a legal document or survey instrument. Any reliance on the information contained herein is at the user's own risk. The Florida Department of Transportation assumes no responsibility for any use of the information contained herein or any loss resulting therefrom.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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The road characteristics database (WKD) for speeds contains speed limits for all roads in the NWB. At the beginning of 2017, WKD was filled for the entire Netherlands with data supplied by municipalities. From that moment on, the new traffic decisions have been used via the Knowledge and Operation Center for Official Government Publications (KOOP) to detect and process changes in speed limits. The NWB changes faster than the speed limits are supplied by the road authorities or placed in COOP. Algorithms are used to supplement the speed where necessary on short intermediate road sections. As a result, the speed limit is unknown for a few percent. Since 2022, the features Trees, Entrances, Bowl Boundaries, Parking Points, Parking Spaces, Traffic Center, Traffic Types, Road Width, Road Categorization and Road Narrowings have been added to the database as a CSV file. NB: In residential areas where a maximum speed of 30 km per hour applies, or in a residential area, this leads to major deviations from reality. The number of rural roads with a 60 km limit has also increased significantly since 2017. The possible speeds that can be entered are 5, 15, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 120, 130 km per hour and unknown. The speeds only apply to roads that are open to car traffic. On cycle paths, footpaths and other roads that are not open to car traffic, the speed is entered as unknown. This also applies to the ferry connections. The file provides variable maximum speeds with a start time and an end time. These apply in particular to motorways. Outside this period with the indicated start time and end time, an alternative speed applies. So, for example, between 6:00 AM and 7:00 PM the speed limit is 100 km per hour and outside of that time the maximum speed is 120 km per hour. The road characteristics database for speeds also contains the recommended speed limits that apply to a specific road section or part thereof.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Analysis of ‘Speed Limits per Street Segment’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/a6392832-6f6d-4d4b-b8f8-87c0c2956e5e on 11 February 2022.
--- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---
A. SUMMARY Maximum speed limits per street segment for the City of San Francisco. Speed limits are indicated primarily for streets that have speeds greater than 25 MPH, unless the speed limit has been changed from a higher speed or a speed survey has been conducted to enforce the de facto speed limit of 25 MPH. 25 MPH is the de fact speed limit for most residential and commercial streets, and apply to streets on this map denoted by a 0 MPH label. Alleys narrower than 25 feet can have de facto speed limits of 15 MPH.
B. METHODOLOGY Speed limit legislation information is taken from MTAB legislation and in some cases directives from engineers in the 5212 classification. Speed limit implementation information is taken from SSD Shops Reports and then parsed via python code. Implementation for speed limits will specify when signs are put in stating the new speed limits, and the work order that the sign installation was spec'd in.
C. UPDATE FREQUENCY Updated quarterly or on an as need basis by request
--- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---
Line geometry with attributes displaying street speed limits in East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana.Metadata
Max Speed limit values in miles per hour. This data is an extract from the Geospatial Roadway Inventory Databse (GRID), which is TxDOT's system for managing roadway assets in Texas.Note: Extracts from GRID are made on a regular basis and reflect the state of the data at that moment. Assets on routes that are in the process of being edited may be affected.Update Frequency: 1 MonthsSource: Geospatial Roadway Inventory Database (GRID)Security Level: PublicOwned by TxDOT: TrueRelated LinksData Dictionary PDF [Generated 2025/04/24]