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Road safety near schools

JKJR data shows school zones consistently rank among the highest-risk pedestrian accident locations in Malaysia. The combination of high vehicle density, illegal parking, distracted drivers, and children on foot creates preventable hazards every school day. Most school-zone accidents are caused by adult driving behaviour — not by children.
Updated July 2026
Most at risk: ages 5–12
7–8am and 1–3pm peak risk
3.5
SEVERITY
out of 10
Why school zones are high-risk — the Malaysian context

Malaysia's school zones are structurally dangerous during arrival and dismissal times. JKJR (Jabatan Keselamatan Jalan Raya) has consistently identified school gate areas as among the highest pedestrian risk locations in the country. The agency recorded over 600 pedestrian fatalities nationally in 2024, with children aged 5–12 disproportionately represented in school-zone incidents.

The pattern is predictable: school arrival (7am–8am) and dismissal (1pm–3pm for morning sessions, and 6pm for afternoon sessions) create extreme vehicle density spikes in a short window. Parents under time pressure perform illegal U-turns, double-park blocking pedestrian crossings, let children exit on the traffic side of vehicles, and drive while on phones. Motorcycles use pavements. Children dart between parked cars. The collision risk at this moment is genuine — but almost entirely preventable.

The data also shows that many accidents near schools involve children not at the school gate itself, but on the walking route to and from school: crossing at unmarked locations, walking on roads with no pavement, or at bus stops on busy roads. This means safe drop-off habits are only half the picture — walking route safety matters equally for children who walk or take public transport to school.

Safe drop-off rules for parents — follow every time
1
Never double-park or U-turn
These are the single largest causes of accidents near school gates. Even if everyone else is doing it — your child will one day walk into a car that appeared because of someone's U-turn.
2
Use the designated drop-off zone
It takes 3 extra minutes. It exists to keep your child safe. Use it every time — not just when it's convenient.
3
Exit on the pavement side only
Never let your child open the car door on the traffic side. Pull fully to the kerb before they exit. This is non-negotiable.
4
No phone while driving in school zones
Children can appear between parked cars in under a second. A distracted driver at 20 km/h has almost no time to react. Put the phone down before entering the school zone.
5
Arrive 5 minutes early
Time pressure is the root cause of most unsafe driving near schools. Leaving 5 minutes earlier eliminates the pressure to rush, double-park, or U-turn.
6
Walk your young child to the gate
Children under 9 do not have the traffic perception skills to navigate busy school zones alone. If parking is unavailable, park away from the school and walk them in — every time.
What to teach your child about walking near schools
1
Stop, look left-right-left
Even at a zebra crossing. Malaysian drivers do not always stop. Look before stepping — even when the crossing signal says walk.
2
Never cross between parked cars
Walk to the nearest official crossing point. A child stepping out between two parked cars is invisible to an oncoming driver until they are already in the road.
3
Make eye contact with the driver
Do not cross until the driver has clearly seen you and stopped. A stopped car is not the same as a car whose driver sees you.
4
No phone while crossing
Phone use while crossing reduces hazard perception by up to 70%. Headphones block the sound of approaching vehicles. Practise putting the phone away before stepping onto any road.
5
Wear bright colours or reflective gear in low light
Morning session students walking in the 6:30–7:30am window are often walking in low light. A reflective bag cover or vest dramatically increases visibility. School uniform (often white) provides poor visibility from a driver's perspective at dusk or dawn.
6
Walk the route together first
Before your child walks to school alone for the first time, walk the full route with them twice — including all road crossings. Identify the safest crossing points. Children who have rehearsed the route with a parent are significantly less likely to take shortcuts that increase risk.
Advocate for your school's road safety

School-zone safety is a community responsibility. Individual parents can make a significant difference through collective action. Through the PIBG (Parent-Teacher Association): raise the issue of unsafe parking, request the principal contact PDRM for police presence at gate times, and propose a walking bus system for children who live near the school.

You can formally request a road safety audit from JKJR for your school zone. JKJR provides this service and can recommend or implement physical improvements (speed humps, crossing guards, pedestrian signage). Contact your nearest JKJR office or submit a request through the Ministry of Transport's eAduan portal.

If you observe dangerous driving near your school regularly, document it (dashcam footage or photos) and report to PDRM. Consistent reporting from multiple parents near the same location creates a documented pattern that triggers enforcement response.

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Key statistics
600+
Pedestrian fatalities nationally in 2024 (JKJR)
7–8am
Peak risk window — school arrival, maximum vehicle density at gates
90%
Of school-zone accidents are preventable through behavioural changes (JKJR analysis)
5–12
Primary age group — primary school children most at risk near school zones
Contacts
999 — Emergency
Police & ambulance — traffic accident
JKJR (Road Safety Dept)
1-800-88-2566
Road safety audits & complaints
PDRM Traffic Division
03-2266 2222
Traffic enforcement & complaints
Sources
JKJR — Annual Road Accident Statistics 2024
MOT Malaysia — School Zone Safety Programme
WHO — Road Safety & Children Global Report 2023
UNICEF Malaysia — Child Road Safety Data
Malay Mail — School zone accident reports 2025
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