The most dangerous roads in East Ipswich
3 crash black spots in East Ipswich over the last 10 years, ranked by a severity score that weights deaths and serious injuries above minor ones. East Ipswich ranks #492 statewide.
“People injured” counts everyone hurt in these crashes, from minor injuries through to deaths. “Deaths” is the number of those people who died.
This ranks worse than 50% of the 993 mapped Queensland suburbs.
Injuries here have fallen about 44%, comparing the more recent years with the earlier part of the period.
Part of the Ipswich City council area →
Worst locations in East Ipswich
| # | Location | Severity | People injured | Deaths | Injured since 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brisbane Rd & Gibbon St, East Ipswich Hospitalisation 5Medical treatment 4Minor injury 1 | 63 | 17 | – | 3 |
| 2 | Chermside Rd & Jacaranda St, East Ipswich Hospitalisation 2Medical treatment 3Minor injury 1 | 30 | 6 | – | 2 |
| 3 | Jacaranda St & Nathan St, East Ipswich Medical treatment 2 | 6 | 5 | – | 0 |
Major roads through East Ipswich
What happens after a crash like this
In Queensland, injuries from a motor vehicle crash are dealt with under the compulsory third-party (CTP) insurance scheme established by the Motor Accident Insurance Act 1994. CTP is a fault-based scheme: compensation is generally available to people injured through another road user’s negligence, rather than for every injury regardless of how it happened. The Act sets out the steps a claim follows — including the pre-court procedures parties must complete before a matter can go to trial. The published data shows most claims resolve by negotiation under that process; the smaller number that proceed to a judgment typically take several years from the crash to a decision.
You can explore the Queensland motor-accident claims data — how claims resolve and what the courts have awarded — in the Roche Legal Quantum database.
What CTP claims pay, by injury severity
Average Compulsory Third Party (CTP) scheme payouts by injury severity, from Queensland Government open data — aggregate scheme averages, not an estimate of any individual claim. What a specific claim is worth depends on its facts.
This is general information about how Queensland law works, not legal advice.
Use this data
Download the data behind this page (CSV). Free to reuse with attribution under CC-BY 4.0.
Cite this page
Roche Legal. “Most dangerous roads in East Ipswich.” Queensland Road Danger Map. Data: Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads (CC-BY 4.0). https://rochelegal.com.au/road-safety/suburb/east-ipswich/ (data updated 2026-07-01).