Potholes in Leduc County, AB

Population 14,416 · Alberta

This page shows pothole reports submitted in Leduc County, Alberta. RoadRot is a free, independent platform — anyone can report a pothole, and reports get forwarded to the responsible municipality.

Nobody's reported a pothole in Leduc County yet.

Be the first. RoadRot tracks the report, sends it to the city, and stays on it until it's fixed.

Report a pothole in Leduc County

Why Leduc County gets potholes

Leduc County sits on open prairie south of Edmonton, which means winters are cold, long, and windy. Snowpack accumulates and compacts on roads for months, and the repeated cycle of plowing, treatment, and refreezing takes a real toll on pavement. The county maintains 829 lane kilometres of paved road, treating them with pickled sand (sand blended with liquid calcium chloride) to keep surfaces driveable through the season. Come spring, all that accumulated abuse shows up fast.

How to report potholes in Leduc County

For road concerns on county-maintained roads (range roads, township roads, and subdivision streets), Leduc County has a Report a Concern online portal at leduc-county.com/county-government/report-a-concern. If the pothole is on a numbered provincial highway (Highways 2, 19, 39, 625, and others), that's Alberta Transportation territory, maintained locally by Ledcor Highways, reachable at 1-866-453-3267. RoadRot works alongside those channels: you drop a pin on the public map, rate the severity, and other drivers can confirm your report to build visibility. If you want to push harder, the built-in email-your-rep tool lets you send a complaint directly to your municipal or provincial representative about a specific report.
Guides

Hit a pothole in Leduc County and damaged your vehicle? Read the Alberta pothole damage claim guide — deadlines, where to file, and what evidence you need. New to RoadRot? See how to report a pothole.

Common questions

Who is responsible for fixing potholes in Leduc County?

It depends on the road. Leduc County Public Works handles range roads, township roads, and roads in county subdivisions. Numbered provincial highways running through the county, like Highways 2, 19, and 39, are Alberta Transportation's responsibility, with Ledcor Highways managing day-to-day maintenance on their behalf.

Does Leduc County have a 311 service?

No dedicated 311 line exists for Leduc County. For non-urgent concerns like potholes, the county's official channel is the Report a Concern portal at leduc-county.com/county-government/report-a-concern. For provincial highway issues, call Ledcor Highways at 1-866-453-3267.

What's the worst time of year for potholes in Leduc County?

Spring is typically the roughest stretch. After months of snow compaction, repeated plowing, and road treatment, the pavement has taken a beating by the time temperatures climb. Freeze-thaw action in the shoulder seasons accelerates cracking, and that's when potholes tend to open up and spread.

How do I claim vehicle damage caused by a pothole in Alberta?

You'd need to file a claim with the responsible road authority, either Leduc County or Alberta Transportation depending on the road. Document everything: photos of the pothole, photos of the vehicle damage, and the exact location and date. Claims aren't guaranteed and the bar for proving negligence can be high, so the more evidence you have upfront, the better.

How does RoadRot help with potholes in Leduc County?

RoadRot is a public map where anyone can pin a pothole, rate how bad it is, and add a photo. Other drivers can confirm the same report, which builds a visible record of where problems are concentrated. If you want to take it further, the email-your-rep tool lets you send a complaint directly to your local representative about a specific report. RoadRot doesn't contact the county automatically, but public visibility and direct emails to reps create real pressure.