Potholes in Brossard, QC

Population 91,525 · Quebec

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

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Report a pothole in Brossard

Why Brossard gets potholes

Brossard sits on the South Shore of the Montreal metro area, which means it takes the full force of southern Quebec winters. The real damage comes from freeze-thaw cycling: water gets into pavement cracks, freezes and expands, then thaws and contracts, breaking up asphalt from the inside. Quebec's transport ministry notes that ground can freeze to depths of 1.2 to 3 metres for more than four months of the year, and climate patterns in the region are trending toward more mid-winter thaw-refreeze events rather than a single clean freeze, which keeps the pavement stress going longer.

How to report potholes in Brossard

Brossard is an independent city, so Montreal's reporting tools don't apply here. Your best starting point is ville.brossard.qc.ca to find the official municipal form or public works contact. SeeClickFix also has a Brossard page where residents post non-emergency issues including road defects, though it's not confirmed as an official city channel. For potholes on Autoroute 10 or Autoroute 30, those roads belong to the Ministère des Transports du Québec (MTQ), not the city. RoadRot works alongside all of this: drop a pin on the public map, let neighbours confirm the problem, and use the built-in email-your-rep tool to send a direct message to your municipal or provincial representative. RoadRot doesn't forward anything automatically. You're the one who triggers the email, but having a pinned, confirmed report behind you makes the complaint a lot harder to ignore.
Guides

Hit a pothole in Brossard and damaged your vehicle? Read the Quebec 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 Brossard?

It depends on the road. Local city streets are handled by Brossard's municipal public works department. Autoroute 10 and Autoroute 30, along with other numbered provincial routes running through the city, fall under the Ministère des Transports du Québec (MTQ). If you're not sure who owns a particular road, a quick check on the MTQ's road network map or the city's website will tell you.

Does Brossard have a 311 line for pothole complaints?

We weren't able to confirm a dedicated 311 number for Brossard from available sources. The city runs its own public works department independently from Montreal, so the right move is to check ville.brossard.qc.ca for current contact information. If you know the official channel, there's a form on this site where you can let us know and we'll update the page.

When is pothole season worst in Brossard?

The worst window is typically late winter through early spring, when temperatures swing repeatedly above and below freezing. Water that seeped into cracks all winter starts expanding and contracting aggressively, and then heavy traffic finishes the job. Quebec also enforces spring thaw load restrictions on provincial roads from roughly mid-March to mid-June, which is a pretty good indicator of when roads are at their most vulnerable.

Can I claim compensation for pothole damage to my car in Quebec?

You can file a claim with the responsible municipality or the MTQ, but it's not a straightforward process. Quebec courts have generally held that governments aren't automatically liable for normal road wear, so you'd typically need to show they knew about the problem and didn't act. You're allowed to file a claim with the city and pursue the matter in court at the same time. Keeping a dated photo and a confirmed RoadRot report can help establish a paper trail.

How does RoadRot help with potholes in Brossard specifically?

RoadRot is a public crowdsourced 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 the problem. The email-your-rep tool lets you send a complaint about a specific pinned pothole directly to your municipal or provincial representative. RoadRot doesn't contact the city or 311 on your behalf, but a geo-tagged report with multiple community confirmations gives your complaint a lot more weight than a phone call alone.