Cyclists, Roundabouts and the Highway Code

Stuart Kightley
roundabout in london

Table of Contents

The Highway Code is more than just a guide to how to pass your driving test. It is intended to be a comprehensive how-to manual on all things traffic, and it has the full force of the law. It is there to direct good and safe behaviour and to discourage and penalise bad and dangerous behaviour on our roads.

Find out how to make a cycling accident claim

So where the Code’s guidance says ‘must’ then that is a mandatory instruction, and to be in breach of it is to be on the wrong side of the law. If it says ‘should’ then that is a direction and to be in breach could still involve legal liability.

Cyclists, being vulnerable road users, look to the Highway Code for protection – for direction in how to conduct themselves as they ride so as to minimise the risk of injury and accident, and for direction to other road users to act considerately around cyclists to the same end.

It is in this context that we look at the rules concerning roundabouts.

A roundabout can be a dangerous place; at worst a Wild West of fast-moving traffic coming together from many different places and directions; a variety of lanes, lights, signs and configurations with cars, vans buses and lorries, all vying for space and jockeying for position.

The relative comfort of a cycle lane is not available in this environment and the cyclist has to take his or her chances on the merry-go-round.

So what advice does the rule book have to offer the cyclist?

The section on Rules for Cyclists at roundabouts starts with this opener:

‘You may feel safer walking your cycle round on the pavement or verge’.

Not only is this advice depressingly defeatist – why should a cyclist have to dismount at the first sight of a roundabout? – it is also of very dubious provenance.

Where is the research that shows that walking a roundabout is safer than cycling it? If the exits are not light controlled then the cyclist has to walk over the mouth of an exit with their bike in the face of traffic exiting the roundabout.

Drivers may be distracted by other vehicles on the roundabout and will likely be accelerating away; they will not expect to come across a person walking across the road.  If it is a two-lane roundabout exit it is all the more hazardous for the poor pedestrian-cyclist.

The section goes on with even worse advice:

‘If you decide to ride round keeping to the left-hand lane you should be aware that drivers may not easily see you, and take extra care when cycling across exits. You may need to signal right to show you are not leaving the roundabout’.

So when turning right at a roundabout a cyclist should stay in the left lane as they go past exits to their left and hope that by sticking out their right arm as they cross the path of exiting vehicles they will somehow avoid a collision.

Better advice would surely be to approach the roundabout in the right-hand lane, to clearly signal right and to stay in the middle of the right-hand lane of the roundabout until passing the exit before their turning.

But the main thrust of the Highway Code should be directed to motor vehicle drivers. It is they who usually cause accidents involving cyclists at roundabouts and it is their actions that need to be policed.

The Code is again woefully inadequate in the guidance it gives to these other road users:

‘Watch out for and give plenty of room to…cyclists…who may stay in the left-hand lane and signal right if they intend to continue round the roundabout. Allow them to do so.’

What is required instead is a recognition that cyclists are entitled to be in the right-hand lane, and that they will be travelling slower than motorised traffic; and also a requirement that drivers give priority to them on a roundabout, and do not overtake them.

This guidance should be mandatory (‘you must give priority to a cyclist on a roundabout’), so at least when a cyclist is knocked off by an inconsiderate driver they have the cold comfort of knowing the driver will be liable in a civil claim.

In fact, parliament could go a step further to protect cyclists on roundabouts to make it a criminal offence not to give precedence to a cyclist on a roundabout, in the same way, that a vehicle has to give precedence to a pedestrian on a crossing. In that way, the injured cyclist would have the additional comfort of knowing that the driver may be prosecuted and that the criminal law may serve to deter bad and dangerous driving at roundabouts.

But in the meantime the government review of the Highway Code announced in October 2018, should recognise that the Highway Code is there to promote road safety, not to compromise it, and to put at the top of its list of amendments the need to completely rewrite the section on cyclists and roundabouts.

Share this article

Contact

Contact us today

For a free initial conversation call 020 7485 8811

Email us Send us an email and we’ll get back to you

    • [utm_campaign_i][/utm_campaign_i]
      [utm_source_i][/utm_source_i]
      [utm_medium_i][/utm_medium_i]
      [utm_term_i][/utm_term_i]
      [utm_content_i][/utm_content_i]
      [gclid_i][/gclid_i]

    Cycling News & InsightsVIEW ALL

    1. road cyclists
      28.2.2023

      Do you have to wear a bike helmet?

      Should bike helmets be mandatory in the UK? Recently, Dan Walker was involved in a nasty collision with a motorist...

      Read more
    2. highway code bike lights
      5.5.2022

      Top 10 Major Highway Code Changes for Cyclists

      New Highway Code rules for cyclists At the end of January 2022, the Highway Code was updated to make British roads...

      Read more
    3. 20.1.2022

      Cycling accident advice

      Now more than ever before, people are embracing the pleasures and benefits of cycling in and around London. Unsurprisingly, the...

      Read more
    4. e-scooter
      16.9.2021

      The law around E-bikes and E-scooters explained

      Why are electric bikes legal but not scooters? E-bikes and e-scooters are the new rides on the block. To many,...

      Read more
    5. 31.12.2020

      Bike Boxes – what are the rules?

      Cycle boxes at traffic lights I read a post recently on a London cycling forum in relation to some confusion...

      Read more
    6. highway code road signs
      2.11.2020

      Highway Code changes just the start in protecting...

      The 2020 changes to the Highway Code do not go far enough to change driver behaviour and protect cyclists and pedestrians,...

      Read more
    7. 9.6.2020

      The importance of parks for cycling

      I ventured outside the comfort of my home this past weekend for the first time in 11 weeks. As I walked...

      Read more
    8. 11.5.2020

      Helmet Cameras: Personal Safety and the Law

      Helmet cameras have become one of the must-have items for cyclists, especially those commuting to and from work.  They offer...

      Read more
    9. bike rider at night
      11.5.2020

      Bike Cam Prosecutions

      Have you ever been cut up by a van turning left? Or been riding along only to find the tarmac...

      Read more
    10. cycling across a bridge in London
      7.5.2020

      Boom time for bikes – London Mayor’s new...

      Yesterday Sadiq Khan unveiled his ‘London Streetspace’ programme designed to transform London’s streets to accommodate a possible ten-fold increase...

      Read more
    11. Laura swaine indoor cycling
      7.5.2020

      Around the World In One Day for NHS...

      On Thursday 30th April 2020 I took part in a 240 mile cycle, raising money for the NHS.  This ride was to...

      Read more
    12. 5.5.2020

      Highway code refresher for cyclists

      As we start week 7 of lockdown, there is one thing that is more noticeable on the roads…cyclists. Whether you...

      Read more
    13. potholes in the road
      3.12.2019

      Cycling accidents involving potholes

      If a cyclist is injured as a result of a pothole or defect on the road they were travelling on...

      Read more
    14. santander cycles in london
      26.11.2019

      Do I need insurance for cycling?

      There is no legal requirement for cyclists to hold insurance cover in order to cycle in the UK. That includes...

      Read more
    15. olympic park stratford london
      13.8.2019

      Death of cyclist in road traffic accident opens...

      After the death of a cyclist outside the Olympic park, Stuart Kightley, personal injury solicitor at Osbornes re-visits the question...

      Read more
    16. cycling in london
      21.6.2019

      E-Bikes – are they the future for commuting?

      The Government released some clarification last week in relation to the upper limit of the cycle to work scheme. Many...

      Read more
    17. car driver
      31.5.2019

      Intimidatory driving to become breach of traffic law?

      A new driving offence of ‘intimidatory driving’ is being considered by the government to crack down on close passes by...

      Read more
    18. 18.5.2019

      Local hubbub over Highbury corner

      Highbury Corner in Islington is one of the busiest interchanges in the whole of the UK (never mind just London)...

      Read more
    19. westminster cycling
      12.5.2019

      Cycling Health Benefits – A ride a day keeps...

      In my 20s I had a massive breakdown and was given an incurable diagnosis with a scary name. I went...

      Read more
    20. 11.5.2019

      Cycle Accident: The Near Miss Project

      One major problem of cycling in the UK is other intolerant road users. This is a large reason for my...

      Read more
    21. cycling across a bridge in London
      11.5.2019

      Can a ‘bike backie’ get you in trouble?

      London’s controversial mayor Boris Johnson has been caught by The Sun newspaper giving his lawyer wife Marina Wheeler a...

      Read more
    22. bicycle accident
      11.5.2019

      Ealing cyclists up in arms over latest death

      After 51-year-old Met Police officer, Claudia Manera was killed in a bike accident at the junction of The Broadway and...

      Read more
    23. 11.5.2019

      New Research Proves That Cycling Officially Makes You...

      New research published by the YMCA shows that those with an active lifestyle are up to 32% happier than people who...

      Read more
    24. accidente de bicicleta
      25.3.2019

      The risks and rewards of cycling in London

      Stuart Kightley of Osbornes solicitors asks the question: is cycling in London good for your health? I acted for a...

      Read more

    VIEW ALL