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Most drivers wrongly believe cyclists must ride single file, stay close to the kerb, and use cycle lanes – and one in three say they shouldn’t have equal rights on the road, new Highway Code survey finds

The study also found that 74 per cent of drivers feel some frustration around cyclists, though 96 per cent claimed they leave the recommended 1.5m distance when overtaking people on bikes

More than three years since a series of changes were made to the Highway Code to better protect vulnerable road users, prompting hysteria in certain sections of the British press, a recent survey has found that the majority of motorists are still unaware, or do not correctly understand, the rules around cyclists.

Those findings come courtesy of Scrap Car Comparison, who surveyed 2,000 drivers last month on their knowledge of the updated Highway Code and its rules concerning people on bikes, as well as their attitudes and behaviour towards cyclists on the road.

Changes to the Highway Code were implemented in January 2022 to better protect vulnerable road users, and included establishing a hierarchy of road users with those most vulnerable (pedestrians, cyclists, and horse riders) placed at the top.

Other updates included advising cyclists to “ride in the centre of your lane” to increase visibility on quiet roads, in slower-moving traffic, and when approaching junctions, and to stay 0.5m away from the kerb even on busy roads.

The Highway Code also acknowledges that it can often be safer to ride two abreast, particularly in larger groups or when accompanying less experienced cyclists, and while dedicated cycling infrastructure can make journeys “safer and easier”, cyclists “may exercise their judgement and are not obliged to use them”.

Cyclists in London (image: Tomek Baginski on Unsplash)

> The Highway Code for cyclists — all the rules you need to know for riding on the road explained

However, according to Scrap Car Comparison’s research – which provided drivers with four statements related to the Highway Code and asked them to determine whether they are true or false – it seems the new guidance still hasn’t fully crept into the public consciousness, three years on.

When provided with the statement ‘Cyclists must use a cycle lane is one is available’, 77 per cent of the motorists surveyed incorrectly asserted that this was true, while 65 per cent wrongly agreed that ‘cyclists must stay as close to the left-hand side of the road as possible’.

Meanwhile, half of those surveyed erroneously believed that the statement ‘Cyclists are allowed to take up a full lane of the road’ was false, with just 34 per cent identifying this as true. Meanwhile, over half (53 per cent) incorrectly agreed that cyclists must always ride in single file.

> Highway Code: One-in-four drivers still don't know correct rule on cyclist priority

“Seeing such a huge number of drivers answer incorrectly to these true and false statements highlights a hole in many people’s knowledge when it comes to the Highway Code,” the valuation site said in a statement.

“Many of the statements reference topics such as group riding and ‘taking the line’ which are common points of tension between cyclists and drivers, highlighting that regardless of whether a particular driver agrees with the rules or not, many conflicts could likely be avoided due to better understanding of the legalities of road cycling, and the responsibilities of drivers in these cases.

“However, it is well worth pointing out that many of the people that answered incorrectly were also cyclists, again demonstrating the importance of everyone, cyclist or not, brushing up on the rules of the road. With so many people heading out on their bikes without a clear understanding of where they stand legally on the road, there’s no wonder that the driver-cyclist relationship is so strained!”

Cyclists in London 1 - copyright Simon MacMichael

> "Check the Highway Code": Police officer claims cyclist shouldn't ride "in the middle of the road"

This “strained” driver-cyclist relationship was explored elsewhere in the survey, with motorists asked about how they feel when sharing the road with people on bikes.

According to the survey, 74 per cent of motorists said they feel “some level” of frustration when driving near cyclists, with less than 10 per cent claiming that they “never” feel frustration.

These levels of frustration were highest among drivers aged between 17 and 24 – with 81 per cent of those in that bracket admitting they get frustrated by cyclists – while women (76 per cent) are more likely to become frustrated than men (71 per cent).

Unsurprisingly, a higher percentage of non-cyclists (76 per cent) experience frustration when driving near people on bikes than cyclists, though a shockingly high 64 per cent of self-described cyclists admitted feeling some frustration when driving their car around those on two wheels.

> “Read the Highway Code – that is not a safe pass”: Police say post advising drivers to give cyclists “an arm’s length” of space while overtaking was published “in error”

Meanwhile, 75 per cent of drivers said they always, often, or sometimes feel nervous when around cyclists, with this number highest among women (81 per cent) and young drivers (88 per cent).

And finally, drawing on the kinds of toxic social media debates surrounding cycling, the survey asked its participants: “Do you believe that cyclists have equal rights to use the road as drivers?” In response, 33 per cent stated that cyclists shouldn’t have equal rights, though 60 per cent agreed that they should.

Perhaps more encouragingly, 96 per cent of drivers claimed that they always leave the recommended 1.5m when overtaking cyclists, though 47 per cent said they’d been involved in a near miss with a cyclist at least once on the roads.

Deal Farm Biogas Highway Code opposition campaign (credit - Hazel Dormer)

> Cyclists wearing helmets seen as "less human" than those without, researchers find

Using the data collected from their survey, the researchers compiled an index of the least bike-friendly cities in the UK, as well as the car brands most associated with negativity towards cycling.

According to their table, Sheffield finished ‘top’ as the least cycle-friendly city in the country, with a ‘cycling negativity’ score of 92.5 – based on knowledge, frustration, attitudes, and overtaking distances – with Newcastle and Leeds rounding off the podium with 84.1 and 82.8 respectively.

Belfast was revealed to be the UK’s most bike-friendly city, with a lowly negativity score of 56 – though, judging by the recent backlash against the Northern Ireland capital’s paltry cycling infrastructure and dangerous road conditions, I’m not sure many of the city’s cyclists would agree with that particular accolade.

When it comes to car brands, Mazda owners topped the table for cycling negativity, with a score of 83.3, while Mercedes-Benz enthusiasts were a close second with 83, with Seat in third at 77.7. Audi, meanwhile, only came tenth, with a score of 73.4.

> “The day cyclists took over the roads”: The Times, Darren Grimes and TikTok react as new Highway Code revisions come into force this weekend

As noted above, the changes to the Highway Code were brought in three years ago and prompted much discussion and hysteria at the time. Just days before the revisions came into force, two major newspapers misrepresented the rules around the ‘Dutch Reach’ technique, designed to reduce the chances of dooring a cyclist.

A further concern came with the lack of communication of the changes to the public, with Cycling UK at the time calling for a long-term public awareness campaign to help produce a “mindset shift” on British roads.

In fact, it took until July 2022, six months after they came into effect, for the changes to be promoted in a THINK! road safety campaign, though an AA survey from three months later showed that 61 per cent of drivers had not read the new rules – a situation which, judging by this most recent research, has persisted into 2025.

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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31 comments

Avatar
kingleo | 6 hours ago
3 likes

About half the car drivers do not have the right to drive a car on our roads because they are drunk and/or drug drivers.

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Hirsute | 8 hours ago
10 likes

Too many idiots out there.

One car length from a layby, so park on the pavement on double yellows.

Just how ???

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chrisonabike replied to Hirsute | 8 hours ago
2 likes

BOLAS tho...

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stonojnr replied to chrisonabike | 2 hours ago
0 likes

and they work on a BMW !!!

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S13SFC | 9 hours ago
1 like

TBF I very, very rarely get close passed these days.

That people overtake in batshit places is another matter.

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NotNigel replied to S13SFC | 8 hours ago
0 likes

So true.  I think it's to do with people only being able to take in information that is repeated over and over again whilst dismissing all the other factors that makes them a reasonable motorist and there seems to have been a big push on the 1.5m minimum pass distance so typical motorists has that, and that only in their mind when overtaking.

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mdavidford | 9 hours ago
7 likes
Quote:

with 81 per cent of those in that bracket admitting they get frustrated by their lack of competence at driving around cyclists

FTFY

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The_Ewan | 9 hours ago
5 likes

Quote:

Perhaps more encouragingly, 96 per cent of drivers claimed that they always leave the recommended 1.5m when overtaking cyclists

If that question was written as 'Do you do the right thing?' (which it sounds like it was) and not as 'What's the recommended overtaking margin?' then whoever designed the survey did a rotten job of it.

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stonojnr replied to The_Ewan | 2 hours ago
0 likes

nah they just read the question as do you always not leave the recommended 1.5m when overtaking cyclists. I know people overestimate their abilities as drivers, but thats bullshit that 96% can ever claim to leave 1.5m.

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Rendel Harris | 9 hours ago
10 likes

Well, I always give thanks that I've been very lucky in life in a huge number of ways, starting with a perfect wife and ending with some lovely bikes (it's Valentine's Day, I'm not allowed to put them the other way round), but in this particular area I must be spectacularly unlucky because 80% of the time I seem to encounter the other 4%. What are the odds?

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mdavidford replied to Rendel Harris | 9 hours ago
3 likes
Rendel Harris wrote:

starting with a perfect wife and ending with some lovely bikes (it's Valentine's Day, I'm not allowed to put them the other way round)

In any case, everyone knows that the perfect bike is the next one you'll buy.

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wtjs replied to Rendel Harris | 6 hours ago
1 like

I must be spectacularly unlucky because 80% of the time I seem to encounter the other 4%. What are the odds?

This is a Poisson problem, based on the hypothesis that drivers are telling the truth (96 per cent of drivers claimed that they always leave the recommended 1.5m when overtaking cyclists). Therefore, in 1000 interactions with overtaking drivers, we want to know how likely it is that Rendel is 'close-passed' 800 times- meaning 'passed with less than 1.5m clearance'. The probability of this outcome, if drivers are telling the truth and he is as unlucky with close passing as he thinks he is-   is:

(exp(-40) x 40^800)/800!       which is indistinguishable from zero

Just supposing Rendel is unduly pessimistic, and he's really only close-passed in 1/3 of overtaking interactions by accidentally happening to come across the supposedly rare 'close-passing driver', (this translates as: 33% of the time I seem to encounter the other 4%)  and is having a short day, the probablity of 33 close-passes from 100 overtakes is 

(exp(-4) x 4^33)/33! which is more manageable and equals 1.45 x 10^-19, which is also essentially zero

Therefore, there is some doubt about the veracity of the claim :96 per cent of drivers claimed that they always leave the recommended 1.5m when overtaking cyclists (which we all don't believe anyway)

 

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mdavidford replied to wtjs | 5 hours ago
3 likes

That only holds if the 4% always pass within 1.5m, though. Given that at least some people will pass wider only some of the time, you've overstated the probabilities, and the chances of the statement being correct are less... than, er... zero. Or something.

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wtjs replied to mdavidford | 3 hours ago
0 likes

The easiest and probably best way of incorporating your 'the 4% of drivers who do not abhor close-passing are not quite as malevolent as they imagine themselves to be' modification of the model is to suggest that the expected number of close-passes from 100 overtakes is less than 4, say 3.5. In that case the probability of the stated outcome arising, given the stated conditions and statements is 1/50 th of the probability for 4 close-passes. This may mean that the 96% claim is even less credible, although it's difficult to say.

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GMBasix | 9 hours ago
6 likes

It is amazing how definitely clear and specific some drivers can be about what rules other people should be obeying, even though the last time they bothered to blow the dust off their Highway Code (bought at great expense for 25p net) was when they allegedly passed their test several decades ago.

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Clem Fandango | 10 hours ago
8 likes

Guess it's no surpise.  Was bound to happen given that the HC changes were left to be communicated to the public (with their usual degree of pragmatism, objectivity & soothing tones) by the Daily Heil & GBeebies.

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anotherflat | 11 hours ago
4 likes

They clearly didn't interview any Range Rover drivers or are they unfrustrated because they just close pass cyclists without any thought?

96% is absolute nonsense, 96% have failed to leave 1.5m when passing a cyclist in their last 10-20(?) cyclist overtakes would be far more accurate.

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mitsky | 11 hours ago
6 likes

The police/DVLA/DVSA should do their own survey like this while requesting each participants personal details.

Anyone who's results fall below a set standard (ie, enough to fail a theory/practical test) should then immediately have their driver's licence revoked.

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wtjs | 11 hours ago
6 likes

96 per cent of drivers claimed that they always leave the recommended 1.5m when overtaking cyclists

It's all junk pseudo-'research', but this bit stands out. The only thing that changed when they issued this 'guidance', was that close-pass offenders routinely say 'I gave you 1.5m' even when they don't even know which distance is supposed to be 1.5m- we all know that the police don't! The majority in Lancashire certainly don't allow 1.5m- maybe  1/4 to 1/3 of drivers do most of the time. It's pretty much invariable here that when drivers overtake approaching the summit of a blind hill and are astounded to discover that there's oncoming traffic in the other lane...they carry on overtaking anyway and squeeze much closer to the soft-bodied cyclist than to the hard steel vehicles coming towards them. This is exactly what happened here with Montgomery Distribution 44 tonner KU71 CUK

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wtjs replied to wtjs | 11 hours ago
6 likes

This one actually stated 'I gave you 1.5m' before threatening to 'fucking flatten' me and knock me off my bike- BMW PK14 HLW

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chrisonabike | 11 hours ago
12 likes

Pretty simple: cyclists are "in the way".

They're slow (even if cycling at the speed limit, all drivers know they're "slower" - e.g. have lower top speeds, slower acelleration etc.)

So drivers "must get in front" - even if there's a junction / traffic light ahead.  Otherwise you might be "stuck behind" the cyclist.  Which is a problem - even if you're OK driving at or below the speed limit slower than you could, the driver behind you won't be!

The fact that cyclists "undertake" (filter) makes getting ahead even more crucial!

Want cycling to be normal and more people (all those non-cyclists in cars) to cycle?  We would have to invert current expectations!  Cyclists should not have to cycle single file.  With almost every other transport mode people travel "socially" e.g. side-by-side, and usually in clusters.

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brooksby replied to chrisonabike | 9 hours ago
4 likes

chrisonabike wrote:

Cyclists should not have to cycle single file.  With almost every other transport mode people travel "socially" e.g. side-by-side, and usually in clusters.

I've been hooted at by drivers while going through a narrow section of road on my way home, while roughly following a line where any front seat passengers would be, if they were in cars driving through there (I'm reading that back, and I think it's clear what I mean?).  And yet it's always the cyclists who are "taking up the road"…

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chrisonabike replied to brooksby | 9 hours ago
4 likes

I recommend a good disguise.

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chrisonabike replied to brooksby | 9 hours ago
3 likes

Also available for undercover horsists.

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Oldfatgit | 12 hours ago
13 likes

As a driver, I often get frustrated with cyclists.
It's mainly down to their lack of road positioning.
I absolutely hate to see a cyclist hugging the drain line, or sitting a handful of cm away from parked cars.
Get in a position where you can be seen, and have an escape route.

I also get frustrated by the dangerous position that red light jumpers place me in. It becomes expected that a cyclist *will* jump the red light, and as a result, fecking dangerous to us that do stop.

And before the 'I'm not responsible for another cyclist action' ... no your not. But in this, your opinion is irrelevant; its the opinion of other road users that's going to get me killed.

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bruxia | 12 hours ago
8 likes

As shown by the image you've used of a cyclist holding a card which is 1.5m wide, it's not a very realistic expectation. 
the fact that most people believe they leave a 1.5m gap shows they are delusional. 
after 23 years of commuting regularly by bike it's certainly feels like 10% do it, 80% dont but leave an acceptable amount of space and 10% clearly are idiots who shouldn't have a driving license
 

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bornslippy replied to bruxia | 11 hours ago
10 likes

bruxia wrote:

As shown by the image you've used of a cyclist holding a card which is 1.5m wide, it's not a very realistic expectation. 

Indeed, so cars should not be overtaking on that road, which I suspect is the point of the image...

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brooksby replied to bornslippy | 9 hours ago
5 likes

bornslippy wrote:

bruxia wrote:

As shown by the image you've used of a cyclist holding a card which is 1.5m wide, it's not a very realistic expectation. 

Indeed, so cars should not be overtaking on that road, which I suspect is the point of the image...

Exactly: if the motorist is sitting there screaming, "But if I leave 1.5 metres then I can't fit past!" then the point is surely that they shouldn't be overtaking there AT ALL.

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GMBasix replied to brooksby | 9 hours ago
3 likes

brooksby wrote:

bornslippy wrote:

bruxia wrote:

As shown by the image you've used of a cyclist holding a card which is 1.5m wide, it's not a very realistic expectation. 

Indeed, so cars should not be overtaking on that road, which I suspect is the point of the image...

Exactly: if the motorist is sitting there screaming, "But if I leave 1.5 metres then I can't fit past!" then the point is surely that they shouldn't be overtaking there AT ALL.

Oh, there you go, with your commen sense.

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Sedis replied to bruxia | 10 hours ago
3 likes

For me it feels like 20% overtake correctly, leaving the required space and at an appropriate speed and about 20% really don't, some of which are clearly doing it with the aim of intimidating the cyclist.

Since the updates to the Highway Code I would say the numbers of both groups has increased slightly.

The rest drive a bit too close, either through ignorance of the rules or because they are bad at judging distances or the size of their massive vehicles. This is not normally an issue unless other factors, such as potholes are involved, but obviously not ideal.

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