About two million people in England have attached a love lock to a bridge in Britain – according to a survey from Sheffield Hallam University – and some more might have done it yesterday, Valentine’s Day.
Love locks are a padlock, often engraved with a couple’s names or initials, which is then locked on to a bridge or gate as a signal of commitment.
In the last 20 years they have appeared across Yorkshire, from Otley Bridge near Leeds to a railway bridge in Rother Valley Country Park and Scarborough Bridge in York.
Dr David Clarke, associate professor at Sheffield Hallam University’s Centre for Contemporary Legend, says the love lock tradition started with an Italian novel, reports BBC News.
“It’s sort of spread, as folklore does, right across Europe, so it’s going on everywhere now, and particularly in England it seems to be very popular,” he says.
“A lot of folkloric traditions such as love locks are actually only 10, 15, 20 years old. There’s new folklore being invented all the time, which is why we wanted to run this survey to try and capture what is really going on.”
The National Folklore Survey for England asked 1,800 people about a range of topics including romance traditions.
Results showed 4.9 per cent of the population has placed a love lock and 49pc mark Valentine’s Day, with those aged 16-34 most likely to celebrate.
While romantic, the practice has caused council’s some pretty big headaches – with some local authorities asking couples to avoid the practice because of potential damage to infrastructure.
In Paris in 2014, part of the parapet of the Pont Des Arts bridge collapsed under the weight of the locks that had been attached.
In Leeds in 2016, the love locks were removed from Centenary Bridge after the council claimed they caused ‘structural problems’.
“Although we understand that people have attached them to the bridge as a sign of affection, the locks can cause corrosion to metalwork and structural problems for bridges,” a spokesperson said at the time.
In May 2025, when Leeds City Council was working on Otley Bridge it removed a number of love locks, asking the public to come and collect them.
Clarke says councils across the globe have been affected by the tradition.
“Not far from where I live in Bakewell in Derbyshire, there was a bridge that had so many of these padlocks on it that the local authority has had to remove them because the bridge was in danger under the weight of the metal,” he says.
“Folklore is a great thing, but also it needs to have measures in place to deal with the popularity of some of these customs.
“Because if a bridge is in danger of collapse because it’s got so many love locks on it, however great a tradition it is in bringing people together and bringing joy, people need to be aware that they can also damage places that are historically important from a heritage point of view.”
The survey also asked participants about lucky objects, and found people are most likely to carry pebbles, crystals and shells.
“The second most common type of lucky object was one associated with a loved one. So people carry photos of grandparents, children, husbands and wives for luck,” says Clarke.