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Nyheder om industrien • 4 min læsning

Lasttyveri i Europa: Hvorfor det stiger, og hvordan flåder kan reducere risikoen

Oprettet: 15.04.2026

Opdateret: 15.04.2026

Lasttyveri er en voksende trussel i hele Europa. Det, der engang blev betragtet som en lejlighedsvis forstyrrelse, er nu en mere vedvarende og organiseret risiko for vejtransport, der påvirker flåder, chauffører og den bredere forsyningskæde.

Rapporterede tab og hændelser er steget kraftigt, og et bredt citeret tal fra branchen peger på en stigning på 438 % i Europa i de seneste år. Alene i december 2025 blev der registreret 557 fragtforbrydelser i 38 lande i TAPA EMEA Intelligence System, og selv om der blev oplyst værdier for mindre end hver femte hændelse, udgjorde de 100 sager stadig mere end 43 millioner euro i alt.

I denne artikel undersøger vi de aktuelle tendenser, og hvad flådechefer og operatører kan gøre for at minimere deres risici.

Hvad kriminelle går efter

Forsendelser af fødevarer og drikkevarer er blandt de kategorier, der oftest angribes i Europa og tegner sig for 10 % af tyverierne. Elektronik, metaller og alkohol ligger også højt. Disse varer er attraktive, fordi de er nemme at flytte, nemme at sælge og ofte svære at spore, når de kommer ind på sekundære markeder.

Det nylige [tyveri af en 12 tons tung sending KitKat-barer] (https://www.cbsnews.com/news/nestle-kitkat-shipment-heist-stolen-europe/) på vej fra Italien til Polen er et godt eksempel. Nestlé sagde, at den manglende last udgjorde ca. 413.793 barer, hvilket viser, hvor hurtigt en almindelig forbrugerforsendelse kan blive et mål, når den bevæger sig over grænserne.

Disse forsendelser er attraktive mål for organiserede grupper, fordi de kan aflæsses hurtigt og dermed give et hurtigt afkast.

Hvor og hvordan tyveri af gods sker

Kapring og tyveri under transport

Lastkriminalitet sker ofte, mens lasten er i bevægelse. Munich Re's 2025-rapport viste, at kapringer udgjorde 21 % af hændelserne, mens 41 % af tyverierne skete under transport. Det er en påmindelse om, at risikoen ikke begynder, når en lastbil parkeres for natten. Den kan begynde længe før et køretøj stopper for natten, især på udsatte korridorer eller ruter, hvor lastens synlighed og sikkerhedskontrollen er svagere.

Angreb på parkerede lastbiler

Parkerede køretøjer er fortsat et stort sårbart punkt. I Storbritannien rapporterede Munich Re, at næsten halvdelen af alle tyverier finder sted på usikrede parkerings- og rastepladser langs vejene. I hele Europa er usikrede steder langs vejene og rastepladser fortsat en fremtrædende del af rapporterne om lastforbrydelser, især hvor chaufførerne har begrænsede alternativer, og de sikrede steder er fyldte.

Organiserede gruppeangreb

Nogle af de mest bekymrende hændelser viser koordinering. [Risk Intelligence] (https://www.riskintelligence.eu/background-and-guides/cargo-theft-the-threat-posed-by-organised-criminal-groups) dokumenterede for nylig angreb i Tyskland, hvor dusinvis af lastbiler blev angrebet på en enkelt nat langs A1-korridoren. Ved en hændelse i november 2023 fik 67 lastbiler skåret deres anhængere op på service- og rastepladser, herunder Ostetal South og Grundbergsee South. Lignende angreb havde allerede fundet sted på samme rute måneder tidligere.

Europæiske hotspots for fragtkriminalitet

Tyskland er fortsat et af de tydeligste hotspots, hovedsageligt på grund af omfanget af gods, der passerer gennem landet. Analyser viste, at Tyskland registrerede 2.498 fragttyverier i 2023, hvilket er mere end dobbelt så meget som Frankrig på andenpladsen. Andre tilbagevendende hotspots omfatter Frankrig, Italien, Spanien og Storbritannien.

Det mønster afspejler virkeligheden i den europæiske godstransport. Tætte logistiknetværk, store godsknudepunkter og stærkt benyttede motorveje skaber flere muligheder for organiserede kriminelle, især når den sikrede parkeringskapacitet ikke kan holde trit med efterspørgslen.

Teknologiens rolle i moderne fragttyveri

Munich Re advarer om, at fragttyve i stigende grad bruger mere sofistikerede metoder, herunder identitetsbedrageri, cyberaktiveret svindel og andre taktikker, der omgår traditionelle kontroller. Bredere [brancherapportering] (https://trans.info/en/cargo-theft-costs-429738) peger på GPS-jamming, manipulation af papirer og omdirigering af forsendelser som en del af dette skift.

En stjålen last kan nu begynde med kompromitterede data, en bedragerisk transportør, en omdirigeret instruktion eller et køretøj, hvis bevægelser ikke længere kan spores ordentligt. For flåder betyder det, at forebyggelse af tyveri nu involverer mere end fysisk sikkerhed. Det kræver også strammere forsendelsesprocesser, bedre kontrol over forsendelsesdata og klarere synlighed i realtid.

Følgevirkningerne for flåder og chauffører

Den mest åbenlyse konsekvens er økonomisk. Stjålne varer fører til tabte varer, forsikringskrav og forstyrrelser. Men den direkte værdi af den manglende last er kun en del af problemet. Forsinkede leverancer, skader på køretøjet, mistede tidspunkter og utilfredse kunder kan alt sammen gøre de reelle omkostninger meget højere.

Der er også menneskelige omkostninger. Chauffører kan blive udsat for trusler, konfrontation eller chokket over at opdage, at der er blevet pillet ved deres køretøj, mens de hvilede sig. Selv når der ikke er tale om direkte vold, skaber udsættelse for usikre stop i vejkanten stress, træthed og en følelse af sårbarhed, som kan påvirke chaufførernes trivsel og fastholdelse.

Driftsmæssigt spredes følgevirkningerne hurtigt gennem forsyningskæden. Et enkelt tyveri kan betyde missede leveringsvinduer, omdirigerede køretøjer, lagermangel og ekstra pres på allerede pressede teams. For temperaturfølsomme, tidskritiske eller værdifulde laster kan konsekvenserne hurtigt mangedobles.

Sådan reducerer du risikoen for godstyveri

Der findes ikke en enkelt løsning, men flåderne kan reducere risikoen med en mere struktureret tilgang til planlægning, parkering og sikkerhed.

Brug sikker parkering, hvor det er muligt

Sikker parkering er fortsat et af de klareste områder, hvor der er plads til forbedringer. TAPA's ramme for sikkerhedskrav til parkering er et internationalt anerkendt benchmark for sikker lastbilparkering, som hjælper operatører med at vurdere, hvilke steder der giver bedst beskyttelse af køretøjer, last og chauffører. At vælge akkrediterede steder vil ikke eliminere tyveri af gods, men det kan reducere organiserede kriminelles muligheder for at slå til betydeligt.

I praksis kan det betyde, at man stopper tidligere end planlagt for at nå et mere sikkert sted i stedet for at køre videre til en usikret rasteplads. Selvom det kan føles mindre effektivt i øjeblikket, er det ofte det mest modstandsdygtige valg.

For flåderne er udfordringen ikke bare at vide, at sikker parkering er vigtig, men også at kunne få nem adgang til den. SNAP hjælper med at bygge bro over den kløft ved at give chauffører og operatører bedre overblik over pålidelige parkeringsmuligheder i hele Storbritannien og Europa, hvilket gør det nemmere at planlægge og reservere sikre stop fra starten.

Læs mere om dette: [Lastbilparkering i Europa: Reglerne, hullerne, risiciene] (https://snapacc.com/newsroom/truck-parking-in-europe-the-rules-the-gaps-the-risks/)

Styrk teknologi og cyberkontrol

Cybersikkerhed indgår nu sammen med fysisk sikkerhed i enhver seriøs tyveriforebyggelsesstrategi. Sporings-, geofencing- og antijamming-værktøjer kan alle hjælpe, men kun hvis de understøttes af klare processer. Flåder bør gennemgå, hvordan forsendelsesdata deles, hvem der kan ændre ruteinstruktioner, hvordan leveringspapirer verificeres, og hvad der sker, hvis et køretøj pludselig forsvinder ud af syne.

Støtte til drivere

Chaufførerne er ofte den sidste forsvarslinje, men de bør ikke bære byrden alene. Klare eskaleringsprocedurer, regelmæssige check-in, sikker hvileplanlægning og træning i mistænkelig aktivitet er alt sammen vigtigt.

Udvidelse af sikker parkering i hele Europa

Et af de største strukturelle problemer bag godstyveri er manglen på sikker lastbilparkering. Når chaufførerne ikke kan finde beskyttede steder med ordentlig belysning, adgangskontrol og velfærdsfaciliteter, er der større sandsynlighed for, at de ender på de steder, som tyvene allerede går efter.

SNAP har uddannet [Parking Safety Requirement Level 3-qualified auditors] (https://tapaemea.org/standards-trainings/parking-facility-security-requirements/), der arbejder på at akkreditere flere parkeringspladser i Storbritannien og på det europæiske fastland, hvilket hjælper med at udvide udbuddet af sikker lastbilparkering og reducere mulighederne for organiseret tyveri.

Book sikre rastepladser i dag

For flåder er udfordringen ikke bare at forstå risikoen, men også at indbygge sikrere beslutninger om at stoppe i den daglige drift. Hos SNAP hjælper vi chauffører og operatører med at identificere pålidelige parkeringsmuligheder i hele Storbritannien og Europa, hvilket gør det nemmere at planlægge ruter med sikkerhed og chaufførvelfærd i tankerne. Tilmeld dig i dag

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onsdag 11 marts 2026 • Nyheder om industrien

LASTBILPARKERING I EUROPA: REGLERNE, HULLERNE, RISICIENE

Guest

Ask most fleet operators what makes life harder than it needs to be and you’ll hear the same answer across Europe: truck parking.Drivers have to stop. Hours rules and rest requirements make that non-negotiable. But on many of Europe’s busiest transport corridors, finding a safe, legal place to park is still uncertain. Capacity is low, security varies widely and most urban hubs aren’t built with HGVs in mind.That pressure has consequences. When designated areas are full, drivers are pushed towards places that were never intended for HGV parking: slip roads, access ramps and industrial estates. Compliance becomes a choice between two risks: stop where you shouldn’t, or keep driving when you shouldn’t.When truck parking overflows into unsuitable places, the environment becomes dangerous: poor visibility, high speeds, unpredictable manoeuvres and limited escape routes. starkly in February 2026, reporting fatal crashes in Germany and Belgium involving stationary lorries. 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The same requirement sets expectations for the location of truck parking. It must be immediately on the network or within 3km of an exit, which will have benefits for route planning. Alongside this shift, the European Commission positions safe and secure truck parking as a priority within its Intelligent Transport Systems work, including the need for to help drivers locate suitable sites.But the EU isn’t just asking Member States to add more truck parking spaces. It’s also defining what “safe and secure” means. In April 2022, the European Commission adopted EU standards for , categorising sites into four security levels: bronze, silver, gold and platinum. The intention is to create transparency for drivers and fleets, and to support investment by giving operators a clear target to design and audit against.This sits against a significant capacity gap. A European Commission study estimates a across the bloc, with the gap potentially rising towards half a million by 2040 if the network does not scale at the pace freight demand requires.Looking at more practical aspects of the situation, what are HGV parking rules and regulations in Europe?At first glance, HGV parking rules across Europe look consistent: Motorways are not designed to absorb overflow parking. Hard shoulders exist for emergencies and safety buffers. Access ramps are not for planned stopping.Urban areas add a layer of complexity. Local restrictions and enforcement are common because HGV parking competes with residents, retail and public space – and because badly parked vehicles create safety risks.Rules around HGV parking in the UK are clear. Trucks should use designated areas such as motorway services, truckstops and lorry parks. Conversely, drivers must avoid parking in locations that create risks, such as pavements, verges and central reservations. Restrictions around parking in residential areas vary by local authority, so it’s vital to check if this is unavoidable. The major constraint is supply. The RHA’s estimate of an , with very high utilisation on key routes, helps explain why informal and unsafe parking persists even where drivers know it isn’t ideal. In 2022, the Department for Transport across England, aimed at better rest areas and more secure parking, framed as part of a broader programme to improve roadside facilities.In Germany, motorway stopping rules are anchored in the (StVO), which makes clear that stopping on the autobahn – including the hard shoulder – is prohibited except in emergencies. That means running out of driving time is not treated as justification. Fines increase if obstruction or danger is caused, and enforcement is active on heavily used corridors. Poland follows the familiar motorway rule that hard shoulders are reserved for breakdowns and emergencies. The nuance appears within cities, where tonnage-based entry restrictions and are common. Overnight HGV parking in urban areas can require municipal approval and enforcement varies between municipalities. For cross-border fleets, that means treating urban stopping as permission-led rather than assumed.France reinforces the same principle through the . Articles R417-9 and R417-10 classify dangerous or obstructive parking offences, and stopping on autoroute carriageways or shoulders is prohibited except in cases of absolute necessity. Penalties can include fines and licence points.However, publishes dedicated information for secure truck parking on its network, reflecting how motorway operators guide HGV stopping into appropriate locations.Spain’s prohibits stopping on motorway shoulders except in emergencies, aligning with broader European practice. Additional complexity lies at municipal level. Many cities operate local overnight bans or restrict HGV parking to designated industrial zones, with enforcement handled by local police rather than motorway authorities. That creates a layered compliance environment: legal on the motorway network does not automatically mean legal in urban areas.To highlight positive developments, that a truck parking facility in La Jonquera became the first in Spain to receive TAPA certification, describing measures such as controlled access, fencing, lighting and continuous monitoring.Italy distinguishes clearly between motorway carriageways, ramps and designated service areas. Stopping on access or exit ramps is explicitly prohibited, and enforcement around motorway infrastructure is consistent. Importantly, Italy differentiates between aree di servizio (full service areas with facilities) and simpler rest or parking lay-bys, which may not support overnight welfare needs. However, Italy is also seeing new secure truck parking developments focused on welfare and security, reflecting the wider European momentum towards better provision.Across Europe, an additional regulatory layer now shapes truck parking decisions: Low Emission Zones (LEZs) and restricted urban traffic zones. Cities in France (Crit’Air), Germany (Umweltzonen), Spain (Zonas de Bajas Emisiones) and Italy (ZTL areas) impose vehicle-class or permit requirements that can apply even to stationary vehicles within the zone. A driver who parks overnight in a restricted area without the correct classification or registration risks fines – even if the stop itself is otherwise legal. Across Europe in 2026, the rules are clear. The constraint is capacity, especially near urban hubs and on high-volume corridors. For fleets, this has a practical impact: European truck parking can’t be left to chance at the end of a shift. It needs to be planned with the same seriousness as , routing, driver hours and security – because when the network fails to provide legal space, every other compliance system gets squeezed.SNAP can help. .