Crash data from a notorious piece of road popular with Auckland holidaymakers could hold clues on how to lower New Zealand's road toll.
Figures released under the Official Information Act suggest a lowered speed limit on an infamous stretch of State Highway 2 has brought early safety gains - reducing deaths and serious injuries by 27 per cent and cutting the crash rate by 26 per cent.
The data is from a 30km section of SH2, which links SH1 near Pokeno and SH25 near Maramarua, and is used by people travelling between Auckland and the Coromandel Peninsula - a hotspot route for family holidays.
When it comes to safety, that road corridor has previously been highlighted as one of the worst-performing sections of state highway in the Waikato and is subject to very high traffic volumes. New Zealand Transport Agency numbers say volume varies from 14,500 vehicles a day to up to 24,000 in peak holiday periods.
Work to tackle safety in the area, where 26 people were killed between 2002 and 2011, began with the NZTA looking at how to manage speed and on December 16, 2011, parts of the 100km/h speed limit were cut to 90km/h. An urban section of the road at Maramarua remained at 70km/h.