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Cyclist finds he’s been fined €400 for riding with headphones after having money blocked in bank account, despite French police never sending a penalty notice

“They weren’t able to find my address [to send a notice] but they found my bank account very quickly to block €400,” said the 23-year-old student

A 23-year-old student in France has found out that he’s been fined €400 the hard way: having his money blocked in his bank account, for riding a bike with headphones, despite never receiving any notice of a fine from the police.

Martin, a student in La Rochelle, west France was riding his bike last August when he was stopped by the police. He told France Bleu that he wasn’t aware of the law and thought he was being pulled over for something else.

“I didn't understand at all why I was getting stopped as I didn't know the law. I asked them: ‘Am I going too fast?’," he said.

The amendment was introduced to France’s Highway Code in 2015 banning the use of headphones for anyone in control of a vehicle in a public space, including cars, cycles, e-bikes, and e-scooters.

Martin told the officers that he was unaware of the law and took off his headphones promptly. He didn’t think much of it, until two weeks ago when he found out that €400 — which he points out is equivalent to two months of his rent at the university accommodation — had been blocked in his bank account by the La Rochelle fines office.

> Cyclist ordered to pay £500 for riding bicycle through town centre as councillor claims hefty fine is "great result for our enforcement teams"

If a cyclist is found riding his bike wearing headphones, the usual fine is €135, similar to other minor offences. If paid within 15 days, it’s reduced to €90. If the fine is not paid within 45 days, however, it can rise to €375, or in Martin’s case, €400. 

He said that he did not receive any prior contact regarding the fine before the sum was frozen in his account. “They weren't able to find my address [to send a notice] but they did find my bank account very quickly,” he said.

Jean-François Changeur, who specialises in road cases claimed that Martin can still appeal the fine, and if the public prosecutor’s office is convinced of his good faith, along with the fact that he never received a notice to pay the fine, he may be exempt from the whole amount.

Can cyclists be fined for riding with headphones in the UK?

No, in the UK, riding with headphones is not illegal, unlike France as well as Spain and Italy. However, cycling without due care and attention is an offence under the Road Traffic Act 1988. Just a few weeks ago, the Met police was heavily criticised after its attempts to prosecute a cyclist who filmed a driver using their phone under the same offence.

Dave Clifton submitted the footage of the driver using the phone, which is also an offence and can draw up to six penalty points on your licence and a £200 fine, as well as losing your licence if the driver passed their driving test in the last two years.

> Police apologise as charges against “dangerous” cyclist accused of “riding on the wrong side of the road” while filming phone driver dropped on eve of trial

The police force let the driver by sending an advisory letter, however it deemed Clifton’s riding as posing a “danger to other road users” because he was “riding in the middle of the road”.

After the heavy backlash, the Met dropped the charges and apologised for any “stress and inconvenience” caused just one day before the cyclist was due to face trial for cycling without due care and attention.

However, fining cyclists under the Public Space Protection Order (PSPO) has become somewhat of a commonplace occurrence in the UK, as many councils have started implementing the act to stop people from riding their bikes in city centres.

Police issuing FPN to cyclist in Southend (Essex Police)

The council most infamous for its somewhat liberal usage of the act is perhaps the North East Lincolnshire Council, which has been making headlines for the last couple of years for slapping cyclists with hefty fines.

Last  year, a cyclist was ordered to pay over £1,100 in fines and costs for riding her bike through Grimsby town centre, just months after unhappy locals claimed that the council was imposing the cycling ban unfairly and targeting “old and slow” cyclists, instead of cracking down on anti-social behaviour.

> “Stick it up your a*se”, 82-year-old tells council officer after being fined £100 for cycling in town centre

And a year before that, an 82-year-old cyclist became somewhat of a legend in the road.cc archives after claiming that he would rather go to jail than pay the £100 fine he received for cycling in Grimsby town centre.

He said: “I’ve been riding my bike around here for 40 years and have never once been fined. When he gave it to me I told him, ‘stick it up your arse’. I’m more annoyed about it because my biking is what keeps me going.”

Earlier this month, a North East Lincolnshire councillor claimed that the fine was a “great result for our enforcement teams” after a cyclist was fined £500 for breaching the PSPO.

More recently, Southend Council also made the headlines after its deputy council leader said that issuing a fine of £100 to cyclists who ride in the town centre was “one of the few options left” for the council in order to take care of anti-social behaviour complaints.

Adwitiya joined road.cc in 2023 as a news writer after graduating with a masters in journalism from Cardiff University. His dissertation focused on active travel, which soon threw him into the deep end of covering everything related to the two-wheeled tool, and now cycling is as big a part of his life as guitars and football. He has previously covered local and national politics for Voice Wales, and also likes to writes about science, tech and the environment, if he can find the time. Living right next to the Taff trail in the Welsh capital, you can find him trying to tackle the brutal climbs in the valleys.

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66 comments

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Boopop | 8 months ago
6 likes

Proper jobsworths fining this poor guy. I've spent many days cycling in France over the past couple of years, haven't had an issue with wearing headphones, even in cities like Paris and Lille.

Do they fine deaf people for cycling too, or are they not allowed to ride bicycles at all? 🤦‍♂️

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Rendel Harris replied to Boopop | 8 months ago
5 likes

Boopop wrote:

Do they fine deaf people for cycling too, or are they not allowed to ride bicycles at all?

It's extraordinary how often this argument appears when talking about the use of headphones when cycling. Surely whichever side of the debate one favours it is perfectly obvious that it is nonsense to draw an equivalence between a person whose hearing is involuntarily impaired and a person voluntarily choosing to impair their hearing. Would you apply it to other senses, e.g. because people with imperfect vision are permitted to cycle would it make sense for a person with perfect vision to wear glasses that impaired that vision?

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OnYerBike replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
2 likes

I don't think it is entirely nonsense. The pertinent question is how important is that sense to being safe on the road.

You've identified sight as being important (and rightly so) - but if one's sight is sufficiently imperfect, they are not legally permitted to drive a motor vehicle (AFAIK there is no strict test for cycling in the same way, but if you are incapable of seeing enough to cycle safely presumably that could be considered careless or dangerous cycling). 

But let's pick another sense. Some people are involuntarily anosmic. There is no restriction on their use of the road (driving/cycling etc.). Would you have a problem with someone voluntarily sticking a bung up their nose to block their sense of smell? Or anti-pollution masks which presumably dull smells to some extent? Presumably not - the sense of smell is not important to being safe on the road (even if, as a cyclist, it is occassionally useful in navigating to a coffee shop).

I would say hearing is somewhere in between. Legally, there is no restriction on deaf people cycling or driving - the powers that be have decided that the sense of hearing is not necessary to be able to use the roads sufficiently safely. But hearing is not completely irrelevant - audible cues are widely used to aid in safety (vehicles are required to have working horns; emergency vehicles have sirens; lorries have reversing sounds and increasingly audible turning warnings too). 

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Rendel Harris replied to OnYerBike | 8 months ago
2 likes

I absolutely agree, I don't think cycling with headphones on/being deaf is a sufficient handicap to say you should be barred from the roads, but I do think that voluntarily giving up one of your senses that can be used as a secondary protection against harm is foolishness. As a heuristic I would say that removing my hearing when cycling would impair my safety between 5% – 15%, depending on the type of road and how busy it was. Personally I'm not prepared to give up that margin just so I can listen to music, even though I love it.

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stonojnr replied to OnYerBike | 8 months ago
3 likes

You can be declared legally blind, so not permitted to drive, but legally still allowed to cycle on roads.

As for the hearing side, I was riding into a 20mph headwind for best part of an hour at the weekend, I couldn't hear f all, other than white noise, I'd have happily worn some ear plugs/headphones to cut the noise level down.

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wycombewheeler replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
3 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

Boopop wrote:

Do they fine deaf people for cycling too, or are they not allowed to ride bicycles at all?

It's extraordinary how often this argument appears when talking about the use of headphones when cycling. Surely whichever side of the debate one favours it is perfectly obvious that it is nonsense to draw an equivalence between a person whose hearing is involuntarily impaired and a person voluntarily choosing to impair their hearing. Would you apply it to other senses, e.g. because people with imperfect vision are permitted to cycle would it make sense for a person with perfect vision to wear glasses that impaired that vision?

what about the equivalence that a cyclist with headphones can still hear more than a driver in their sealed glass box before they even turn on the music system which is perfectly legal.

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Rendel Harris replied to wycombewheeler | 8 months ago
1 like

wycombewheeler wrote:

what about the equivalence that a cyclist with headphones can still hear more than a driver in their sealed glass box before they even turn on the music system which is perfectly legal.

Fine, that's a valid equivalence. Trying to say that people who say it's foolish to cycle with headphones on are effectively saying that deaf people should be banned from cycling is not.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
2 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

It's extraordinary how often this argument appears when talking about the use of headphones when cycling. Surely whichever side of the debate one favours it is perfectly obvious that it is nonsense to draw an equivalence between a person whose hearing is involuntarily impaired and a person voluntarily choosing to impair their hearing. Would you apply it to other senses, e.g. because people with imperfect vision are permitted to cycle would it make sense for a person with perfect vision to wear glasses that impaired that vision?

Having made a similar argument myself in the past, I disagree.

If you look at the purpose behind the law, presumably it is to do with whether it is safe (or causes danger to others) or not. If impaired hearing, whether voluntary or not, is unsafe, then why is one group allowed to ride and not the other?

I'm not convinced that impaired vision can be compared to impaired hearing as they have different roles for road danger. Vision is most often used for situations ahead and around you, whereas hearing is mainly used for situations behind you and I think it's debatable as to how much value that provides. e.g. when you hear an engine approaching, do you take evasive action when cycling in any but the most extreme cases?

(I was trying to think of a common instance when people impair their eyesight voluntarily, but can only come up with sunglasses and I don't think they really count as impairing)

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Rendel Harris replied to hawkinspeter | 8 months ago
1 like

This is the trouble, I'm in no way supporting the law nor am I saying that I think it should be against the law to wear headphones nor that it's fair that people should be punished for wearing headphones when drivers are allowed to have music as loud as they like, I'm just saying that voluntarily impairing your hearing with headphones is, in my view, foolish. In no way supporting the law in France or a similar law being brought in here, even though every time one says this one is accused of doing so.

In terms of the value of hearing for assessing road danger, I find it invaluable; riding in London traffic I can often assess the aggressiveness or otherwise of the driver behind me through their engine note and I can also tell what type of vehicle is coming up behind me and be ready, for example, to brace against turbulence when being passed by a bus or a lorry. It's also useful on cycle paths to be able to hear faster riders approaching and calling out/ringing bells so one can make room for them, it's highly frustrating to be stuck behind someone with earphones riding in the middle of the track and politely calling out "coming on your right mate" and getting no reaction. 

There isn't really a parallel example of people impairing their eyesight, I was just using that as a "what if?" I suppose an equivalent would be the Google Glass heads up display where, if I recall correctly, one could have maps or whatever projected into one's field of vision. Cycling with that on would seem to me pretty foolish, though judging by the reactions on here I would then be told that drivers are allowed satnav so why would I stop cyclists having it…

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grOg replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
1 like

So you also think it's foolish for pedestrians to wear headphones..

I get earaches cycling without ear protection; my hearing is certainly impaired but not hearing normal traffic noise is a blessing, not a negative.

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Rendel Harris replied to grOg | 8 months ago
3 likes

grOg wrote:

So you also think it's foolish for pedestrians to wear headphones..

If pedestrians were running at 15-20mph whilst sharing the road with cars I'd think it was, yes. Crikey, I thought the deaf people cycling argument was a false equivalence but at least there's an argument to be had there, well done for trumping it with something that makes no sense whatsoever.

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grOg replied to hawkinspeter | 8 months ago
0 likes

When I ride in the rain, my vision through my water covered glasses definitely impairs my vision.

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hawkinspeter replied to grOg | 8 months ago
1 like

grOg wrote:

When I ride in the rain, my vision through my water covered glasses definitely impairs my vision.

I find it's often better to remove cycling glasses when it's raining hard for that reason.

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BalladOfStruth replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
6 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

It's extraordinary how often this argument appears when talking about the use of headphones when cycling. Surely whichever side of the debate one favours it is perfectly obvious that it is nonsense to draw an equivalence between a person whose hearing is involuntarily impaired and a person voluntarily choosing to impair their hearing.

I honestly don't see how it's 'nonsense'. It doesn't matter if the impairment is voluntary or not, what matters is the outcome. If cycling whilst totally deaf is considered safe, you cannot claim that cycling with headphones is dangerous without contradicting your stance on deaf cyclists. If driving a 2.5 tonne Range Rover at 70mph whilst deaf is considered safe, you cannot claim that cycling with headphones on is dangerous without contradicting your stance on deaf drivers. That’s before we even get into open-back vs closed-back headphones, or how headphones compare to car radios, or even cars just having the windows up.

I’m with you on the voluntarily giving up a sense, and I wouldn’t do it either, but when people make this argument, they aren’t suggesting that deaf people should be banned from cycling as well, they’re making an equivalence between the “safety outcome” of a deaf cyclist vs a headphone-wearing cyclist - they're making an equivalence between the Government considering one safe and the other unsafe. You cannot say that the latter is dangerous whist maintaining that the former is safe.

The equivalence/argument is perfectly valid IMO.

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Rendel Harris replied to BalladOfStruth | 8 months ago
1 like

I have not said that deaf people cycling is dangerous, however I do believe that a deaf person is probably less safe on the roads – not to any degree that they should be banned – than a person with full hearing. This is backed up, anecdotally, by two friends of mine who have experienced severe hearing loss as they have got older and they both find that it makes cycling more difficult for them. In the same way, I would not and have not stated that people cycling with headphones is dangerous, but I do believe it takes away some element of safety. Cycling whilst totally deaf may be considered safe, is it considered as safe as cycling when being able to hear? I think for most people the answer will be no, and therefore it is foolish for people voluntarily to relinquish their ability. If people do not have the ability in the first place, that is an entirely different matter. There's a difference between being dangerous, a word which you have used but I have not, and being less safe than one could be.

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BalladOfStruth replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
2 likes

Then - and I apologise if I’m being thick here - but I’m struggling to see what the problem is with the comparison being made in the initial comment. When people make this argument, they’re not suggesting that voluntary and involuntary impairments are the same, they’re asking why one “safety outcome” is considered unacceptable whilst another, identical “safety outcome” (or in the case of deaf drivers, a higher risk “safety outcome”) is considered totally fine.

I completely agree with you that cycling with impaired hearing (voluntary or involuntary) is less safe than being able to hear cars around you and that I wouldn’t personally do it, and I also do not think that cyclists with involuntary hearing impairments should be banned from the road.

However, cycling with headphones is one of those things that gets quite a significantly disproportionate amount of flak for the risk it presents, and I think that pointing out the deaf cyclists and drivers are considered safe is a perfectly reasonable way of making that point.

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Rendel Harris replied to BalladOfStruth | 8 months ago
0 likes

BalladOfStruth wrote:

Then - and I apologise if I’m being thick here - but I’m struggling to see what the problem is with the comparison being made in the initial comment. When people make this argument, they’re not suggesting that voluntary and involuntary impairments are the same, they’re asking why one “safety outcome” is considered unacceptable whilst another, identical “safety outcome” (or in the case of deaf drivers, a higher risk “safety outcome”) is considered totally fine.

You're not being thick, maybe I haven't explained my opinion clearly enough, but the reason one outcome is considered unacceptable and the other isn't is that in the case of deaf people they have no choice about not being able to hear and it would be unfair and discriminatory to ban them from the roads on bicycles because of it. In the case of people without hearing impairment, they have a choice, and in my opinion the sensible choice is not to voluntarily impair your hearing. Being told to be sensible is not discrimination.

Let's try an analogy from another scenario (and I realise it may open a can of worms so Covid/vaccine deniers, please don't bother!): during the pandemic there were some people who were genuinely unable, due to physical or psychological reasons, to wear a mask. This was generally accepted and arrangements were put in place to accommodate such people. This did not mean that it was generally accepted that people could just refuse to wear a mask because they couldn't be bothered or didn't care. There was a definite distinction between groups who had a genuine reason not to comply and those who were just being obstreperous. I would say there is the same world of difference between saying that people who can hear shouldn't ride bicycles deliberately cutting off their hearing and saying that deaf people, who have no choice in the matter, shouldn't ride.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
2 likes

You mention that it would be discriminatory to ban deaf cyclists/drivers from the road and yet vision impaired drivers are disallowed from driving. That's due to vision being critical to driving safely and hearing is hardly ever relevant. That's also why hearing is not mentioned in the Highway Code - it's only of any use when you cannot see other traffic.

Having a law that distinguishes between voluntary wearing of headphones (and the subsequent reduction of hearing) and having a "genuine" hearing issue don't really make any sense. What if they catch a deaf cyclist wearing headphones to keep their ears warm?

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Rendel Harris replied to hawkinspeter | 8 months ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

Having a law that distinguishes between voluntary wearing of headphones (and the subsequent reduction of hearing) and having a "genuine" hearing issue don't really make any sense.

Mate, where have I said anywhere on this thread that I support a law to stop people wearing headphones? I have gone out of my way to say that I would not support such a law! I have simply said that I think it is foolish for people with good hearing to impair that sense by listening to music when cycling. I don't believe that hearing is critical to cycling in the same way as vision, as I have said, I do believe that listening carefully to what's going on around you can improve safety by maybe 10/15%. That's all.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
0 likes

Calm down, I'm not saying that you support that law.

I do disagree with your 10-15% estimate though. Maybe 0.1%, I reckon.

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Rendel Harris replied to hawkinspeter | 8 months ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

I do disagree with your 10-15% estimate though. Maybe 0.1%, I reckon.

Maybe that's your experience, which is fine. For me, riding pretty much every day in central London, I rely on hearing to give me an initial warning of what's coming behind, how close it is and how fast it's going, not to mention (living close to South London's biggest A&E) to hear emergency vehicles coming. Definitely not 0.1% for me.

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Griff500 replied to hawkinspeter | 8 months ago
1 like
hawkinspeter wrote:

Having a law that distinguishes between voluntary wearing of headphones (and the subsequent reduction of hearing) and having a "genuine" hearing issue don't really make any sense.

No, making any comparison between voluntary wearing of headphones and a person with a genuine hearing issue doesn't make any sense. It is well established that those with a sensory impairment make better use of remaining senses. A blind person typically hears and smells more acutely than the rest of us, and a deaf person makes more use of his eyes than the rest of us. There is no equivalence between somebody voluntarily listening to Coldplay at 110dB to a person with permanent audio impairment. (Although the former may well become the latter)

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Paul J replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
2 likes
Rendel Harris wrote:

Let's try an analogy from another scenario (and I realise it may open a can of worms so Covid/vaccine deniers, please don't bother!): during the pandemic there were some people who were genuinely unable, due to physical or psychological reasons, to wear a mask.

There's no "denier" to it. The better quality evidence available on masks - pre-pandemic, and to date - can not find a significant protective effect for community mask use against respiratory illnesses.

The evidence that finds significant protective effects is all lower quality (not RCTs, observational or mechanical).

Masks were largely pushed by idiots, for political reasons.

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Eton Rifle replied to BalladOfStruth | 8 months ago
0 likes

Bravo ! Really well articulated. 👍

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grOg replied to Rendel Harris | 8 months ago
0 likes

It is absolutely a legitimate argument and has been sucessfully used in Australia to defeat any attempt to make headphone wearing illegal for cyclists. As for vision, you are legally required to wear glasses to drive a motor vehicle if you need to wear glasses to pass the vision test, but not if you are riding a bicycle.

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Benthic | 8 months ago
16 likes

Cycling with headphones on: unacceptable.

Driving a car with the windows closed and stereo on: perfectly OK.

 

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kettlenorth replied to Benthic | 8 months ago
1 like

Driving a car without rear-view and side-view mirrors should also be perfectly fine using your logic then.

Stop comparing cars and bicycles, they are not the same.

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RoubaixCube | 8 months ago
1 like

French Communist Party

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john_smith replied to RoubaixCube | 8 months ago
3 likes

Yup. Woke EU nonsense.

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lesterama replied to john_smith | 8 months ago
17 likes

Wait, bikes are woke, so fining people on bikes is anti-woke, but Europeans are woke, so fining Europeans on bikes is anti-woke, but the French are woke, so the French fining someone is obviously woke.

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