Request a Speed Hump Study in Edmonton - Bylaw Guide

Transportation Alberta 3 Minutes Read · published February 11, 2026 Flag of Alberta

Overview

Edmonton, Alberta residents can ask the city to evaluate a street for speed humps as part of neighbourhood traffic calming and safety programs. The city documents the neighbourhood traffic management approach and criteria used to screen requests and determine whether a speed hump study will proceed. [1]

Process

Typical municipal steps include an initial intake, a speed and volume study, community support checks, engineering assessment, and prioritization for design and installation. Timelines vary by workload, season, and funding availability.

  • Request intake and triage by city staff.
  • Conduct of speed and volume studies to confirm conditions.
  • Community consultation or petition to measure local support.
  • Design, approvals, and scheduling for installation if approved.
Local petitions and measured speeds are often decisive in approval decisions.

Penalties & Enforcement

The municipal program governs placement of traffic calming devices; enforcement of moving-vehicle offences remains under provincial traffic law. Specific monetary fines or administrative penalties for tampering with or damaging traffic-calming infrastructure are not listed on the cited city program pages and are not specified on the cited page.

  • Enforcer: City of Edmonton Transportation Services and Bylaw Enforcement handle installation, maintenance, and complaints.
  • Fines: not specified on the cited page.
  • Escalation: first/repeat/continuing offence ranges are not specified on the cited page.
  • Appeals & review: requirements and time limits for appeals are not specified on the cited program pages; typical routes are administrative review or provincial ticket dispute processes where applicable.
  • Non-monetary actions: removal or repair orders, restoration orders, and court action for damage or obstruction are possible remedies described in enforcement practice but specific authorities or sections are not specified on the cited program page.
If a device is damaged or removed, report it promptly to the city to avoid safety risks.

Applications & Forms

The City provides a traffic calming intake and request pathway; interested residents should use the official traffic calming request channel and any published request form to start a study. [2]

  • Form name: Traffic calming / neighbourhood traffic management request (official intake form or online submission as published by the city).
  • Fees: not specified on the cited page.
  • Deadline: no universal deadline; requests accepted year-round subject to program timelines.

FAQ

How do I request a speed hump study?
Submit a traffic calming request through the City of Edmonton intake process and provide locations, concerns, and community support details.
What criteria does the city use?
The city uses measured speeds, traffic volumes, collision history, and neighbourhood context to evaluate requests.
Do I need a petition?
Many neighbourhood traffic programs request evidence of local support or petitions; check the city form or guidance for exact thresholds.
How long does a study take?
Timing varies by season and program resources; studies can take weeks to months from intake to report.

How-To

  1. Document the problem: note locations, times, and vehicle behavior.
  2. Gather neighbour support: collect signatures or survey results if the program requests them.
  3. Contact the City to submit the formal request or form through the traffic calming intake.
  4. Allow the city to conduct speed and volume studies and await the engineering assessment.
  5. If approved, follow up on design, scheduling, and any conditions for installation.

Key Takeaways

  • Start with the city intake and provide clear evidence of speed or safety concerns.
  • Community support and measured speeds are central to approval decisions.
  • Use official forms and contact city staff for timelines and next steps.

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] City of Edmonton Traffic calming overview
  2. [2] City of Edmonton Neighbourhood Traffic Management / request pathways