Provincial Routes in South Africa
Provincial route marker for R33
Map of national routes and provincial routes
in blue and green, respectively
Highway names
National routesNxx
Provincial routesRxx
Metropolitan routesMxx
System links

Provincial routes (also referred to as major regional routes) are the second category of road in the South African route-numbering scheme.[1] They are designated with the letter "R" followed by a number from 21 to 82, formerly with the letter "P" followed by a number from 66.[2] They serve as feeders to the national routes and as trunk roads in areas where there is no national route.

Designation as a provincial route does not necessarily imply that a road is maintained by the road authority in the provincial government; some parts of the provincial route network are maintained by the National Roads Agency (SANRAL), and parts in towns may be ordinary streets maintained by the municipal roads departments. Provincial routes vary in quality from gravel roads (for example the R31 between Askham, Northern Cape, and Hotazel) to freeways (for example the R59 between Vereeniging and Johannesburg).

List of routes

No.Route
R21BoksburgKempton ParkCenturionPretoria
R22HluhluweKosi Bay (– Ponta do Ouro, Mozambique)
R23VolksrustStandertonHeidelberg (GP)BrakpanBenoniKempton Park
R24RustenburgKrugersdorpRoodepoortJohannesburgBedfordviewKempton Park
R25JohannesburgKempton ParkBapsfonteinBronkhorstspruitGroblersdal
R26RouxvilleLadybrandFicksburgBethlehemReitzFrankfortVilliers
R27
R28VereenigingSebokengWestonariaRandfonteinKrugersdorp
R29JohannesburgGermistonBoksburgBenoniSpringsLeandraKinross
R30BloemfonteinWelkomOdendaalsrusBothavilleOrkneyKlerksdorpVentersdorpRustenburg
R31(Keetmanshoop, Namibia –) RietfonteinKurumanKimberley
R33PietermaritzburgGreytownDundeeVryheideMkhondoCarolinaeMakhazeniGroblersdalMarble HallModimolleLephalale
R34VryburgSchweizer-RenekeBloemhofHoopstadWesselsbronOdendaalsrusKroonstadHeilbronFrankfortNewcastleUtrechtVryheidUlundiEmpangeniRichards Bay
R35AmersfoortBethalMiddelburg (MP)
R36ErmeloCarolinaMashishingTzaneenLouis Trichardt
R37PolokwaneMashishingNelspruit
R38StandertonBethalCarolinaBarbertonKaapmuiden
R39StandertonErmelo
R40(Piggs Peak, Eswatini –) BulembuBarbertonNelspruitWhite RiverHoedspruitPhalaborwa
R41RandfonteinRoodepoortJohannesburg
R42ParysVanderbijlparkVereenigingHeidelberg (GP)NigelDelmasBronkhorstspruit
R43GansbaaiHermanusWorcesterCeres
R44KleinmondStrandSomerset WestStellenboschWellingtonPiketberg
R45SaldanhaVredenburgMalmesburyWellingtonPaarlVilliersdorp
R46MalmesburyCeresTouws River
R48De AarPetrusville - Petrusburg
R49MahikengZeerust – Kopfontein (– Gaborone, Botswana)
R50StandertonLeandraDelmasPretoria
R51VilliersBalfourNigelSpringsBapsfontein
R52VryburgLichtenburgRustenburg
R53ParysPotchefstroomVentersdorpSwartruggens
R54PotchefstroomVereenigingVilliers
R55SandtonPretoria
R56Middelburg (EC)MoltenoElliotMatatieleKokstadPietermaritzburg
R57PhuthaditjhabaReitzHeilbronSasolburgVanderbijlpark
R58ColesbergBurgersdorpAliwal NorthBarkly EastNgcobo
R59DealesvilleBothavilleParysSasolburgVereenigingMeyertonJohannesburg
R60WorcesterRobertsonSwellendam
R61Beaufort WestGraaff-ReinetCradockQueenstownMthathaPort EdwardMargatePort Shepstone
R62AshtonOudtshoornHumansdorp
R63CalviniaCarnarvonGraaff-ReinetFort BeaufortKing William's TownKomga
R64KimberleyBoshofBloemfontein
R65ErmeloSandlane (– Manzini, Eswatini)
R66GingindlovuEshoweUlundiNongomaPongola
R67Port AlfredGrahamstownFort BeaufortQueenstown
R68DundeeMelmoth
R69VryheidMkuze
R70OdendaalsrusHennenmanSenekalFicksburg
R71PolokwaneTzaneenNamakgalePhalaborwa
R72Port ElizabethPort AlfredEast London
R73WinburgVirginiaWelkom
R74HarrismithBergvilleGreytownKwaDukuza
R75Port ElizabethUitenhageGraaff-Reinet
R76OrkneyKroonstadBethlehem
R80PretoriaSoshanguve
R81PolokwaneGiyaniThohoyandou
R82KroonstadVereenigingJohannesburg

Images

See also

References

  1. Falkner, John (May 2012). South African Numbered Route Description and Destination Analysis. National Department of Transport. p. xi. Archived from the original on 6 June 2014. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
  2. SADC Road Traffic Signs Manual, Volume 1: Uniform Traffic Control Devices. National Department of Transport. May 2012. p. 8.6.1. Archived from the original on 4 September 2014. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
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