A fictional road number is a road number that does not really exist except in works of fiction.
United Kingdom
If a fictional road number is used in on TV or film, it is blacklisted, meaning it cannot be used in real life for five years.
- The Archers, a BBC radio soap opera
Note: These road numbers were obtained from the map of Borsetshire provided by the BBC. [1] Since the county is apparently between Worcestershire and Warwickshire, the numbers in the county should technically begin with a 4 to be in the right "zone", according to the British road numbering scheme.
- A1702
- A1823
- A1829
- A1835
- A1992
- A9110, linking the town of Borchester with the city of Felpersham
- B1900
- B1985
- B3391, running through the village of Ambridge where the series is set
- B3700
- B3770
- B4879
- Blott on the Landscape
- M101, featured in the novel by Tom Sharpe
- M399, featured in the 1985 TV version instead of the M101
- Thunderbird 6
- M104, used in the 1966 film - in reality, this was part of the M40 motorway that had just been built and not yet opened
United States