Many drivers don’t know the rules for entering and leaving a traffic circle. These road safety features are found at junctions and were designed to keep traffic flowing.
When there is confusion about what to do at a circle, the results can be traffic delays or worse still, accidents. In this blog, we take a look at how best to deal with a traffic circle to ensure road safety.
According to roadsafety.co.za, being aware of the differences between the types of traffic circles is key to knowing how to treat them. In South Africa, we have mini-circles and roundabouts.
A mini-circle is small, it is an intersection with a painted circular hump or island in the middle that drivers go around in a clockwise direction. Unlike four-way stops, which have a solid stop line, mini-circles have a broken yield line.
Drivers should treat mini-circles as they would four-way stops – they should give way to other vehicles that reach or cross the line before them.
Roundabouts are larger circles. Like mini-circles, drivers go around clockwise, but at roundabouts, vehicles give way to traffic that’s approaching from the right.
The Arrive Alive website states: “As you enter the roundabout, traffic coming from your right has right of way. This means that traffic streaming into the roundabout from the entrance to your right will keep coming as long as no one is coming from their right.”
There are also more detailed instructions to help you drive safely when going around a traffic circle/roundabout:
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