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Which side of the road do they drive on...?
[Rec.Travel Library]
Maintained by Brian Lucas,
lucas@travel-library.com. Rec.Travel Library
Last update: April 1998. The latest version of this file can be found at
http://www.travel-library.com/general/driving/drive_which_side.html.
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1. INTRODUCTION
The question of which side of the road people drive on in various countries
arises from time to time on the net. A fairly comprehensive list has been
compiled, although I don't know who originally compiled it. This version of the
list was first seen sometime in 1991 and comes to us by way of
alt.folklore.urban and several people who stored it for various periods of time.
Thanks to Bernd Wechner for his help in updating the list.
To stave off the single most frequently asked question on this topic, you don't
have to worry about what side to drive on in the Chunnel (the tunnel between
England and France, under the English Channel), because you don't drive in the
Chunnel. When you arrive at the terminal, you drive your car onto a flatbed rail
car, and the train hauls you across the tunnel.
LATEST ADDITION, APRIL 1998: Malcolm Roe came forward to tell us about his
memories of Sweden's change from driving on the left to driving on the right,
and Mark Brader added some comments on Canada's road habits and several
countries' railroads.
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2. THE LIST
R Drive on the right-hand side of the road (and mostly the driver
sits on the left side of the car), as in the United States of
America.
L Drive on the left-hand side of the road (and mostly the driver sits
on the right side of the car), as in the United Kingdom.
r,l As above, but unconfirmed reports, unsure, or guesses.
? Unknown to me so far.
0 Pretty much uninhabited or no convention established.
R Afghanistan
R Albania
R Algeria
R Andorra
R Angola
L Anguilla
L Antigua and Barbuda
R Argentina
r Armenia
L Australia
R Austria
r Azerbaijan
L Bahamas
R Bahrain
L Bangladesh
L Barbados
r Belarus
R Belgium
R Belize
R Benin
L Bermuda
L Bhutan
R Bolivia
r Bosnia and Herzegovina
L Botswana
R Brazil
l British Virgin Islands
L Brunei
R Bulgaria
R Burkina Faso
R Burma
R Burundi
R Cambodia
R Cameroon
R Canada
R Cape Verde
R Central African Republic
R Chad
R Chile
R China, People's Republic of (Mainland China)
R Colombia
R Comoros
R Congo
L Cook Islands
R Costa Rica
R Croatia
R Cuba
L Cyprus
R Czech Republic
R Denmark
R Djibouti
L Dominica
R Dominican Republic
R Ecuador
R Egypt
R El Salvador
R Equatorial Guinea
R Eritrea
R Estonia
R Ethiopia
L Fiji
R Finland
R France
R French Guiana
R French Polynesia
R Gabon
R Gambia, The
r Gaza Strip
R Georgia
R Germany
R Ghana
R Gibraltar
R Greece
L Grenada
R Guadeloupe
R Guam
R Guatemala
L Guernsey
R Guinea
R Guinea-Bissau
L Guyana
R Haiti
R Honduras
L Hong Kong
R Hungary
R Iceland
L India
L Indonesia
R Iran
R Iraq
L Ireland
R Israel
l Isle of Man
R Italy
R Ivory Coast
L Jamaica
L Japan
R Jordan
R Kazakhstan
L Kenya
l Kiribati
R Korea, Democratic People's Republic of (North Korea)
R Korea, Republic of (South Korea)
R Kuwait
R Kyrgyzstan
R Laos
R Latvia
R Lebanon
L Lesotho
R Liberia
R Libya
R Liechtenstein
R Lithuania
R Luxembourg
L Macau
R Macedonia
R Madagascar
L Malawi
L Malaysia
l Maldives
R Mali
L Malta
R Marshall Islands
R Martinique
R Mauritania
L Mauritius
R Mexico
R Micronesia, Federated States of
R Moldova
R Monaco
R Mongolia
R Morocco
L Mozambique
L Namibia
l Nauru
L Nepal
R Netherlands
R New Caledonia
L New Zealand
R Nicaragua
R Niger
R Nigeria
R Northern Mariana Islands (Saipan)
R Norway
R Oman
L Pakistan
R Panama
L Papua New Guinea
R Paraguay
R Peru
R Philippines
R Poland
R Portugal
R Puerto Rico
R Qatar
R Reunion
R Romania
R Russia
R Rwanda
L Saint Kitts and Nevis
L Saint Lucia
L Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
R San Marino
R Sao Tome e Principe
R Saudi Arabia
R Senegal
R Serbia
L Seychelles
R Sierra Leone
L Singapore
R Slovakia
R Slovenia
L Solomon Islands
L Somalia
L South Africa
R Spain
L Sri Lanka
R Sudan
L Suriname
L Swaziland
R Sweden
R Switzerland
R Syria
R Taiwan (Republic of China)
R Tajikistan
L Tanzania
L Thailand
R Togo
L Tonga
L Trinidad and Tobago
R Tunisia
R Turkey
R Turkmenistan
l Turks and Caicos Islands
l Tuvalu
L Uganda
R Ukraine
R United Arab Emirates
L United Kingdom
R United States
R Uruguay
R Uzbekistan
R Vanuatu
R Venezuela
R Vietnam
L Virgin Islands (British)
L Virgin Islands (US)
r Wallis and Futuna Islands [Fr.]
r West Bank
R Western Sahara (ex Spanish Sahara)
R Western Samoa
R Yemen
R Zaire
L Zambia
L Zimbabwe
3. BORDER CROSSINGS
A related question, of course, is "If (some country) and (some other
country) have a land border, how do drivers switch sides when they cross
the border?" This is not such a great puzzle as it might seem, because the
most important thing about a border crossing is that one has to stop.
In most cases, it seems that you drive into the customs area, park your
vehicle for inspection, and then when you leave via the other side of the
parking lot, you simply make sure you are on the correct side of the road.
Here are a few reports from the scene...
Andrew Myles, andrewm@macadam.mpce.mq.edu.au, writes:
It was not a problem at the only border I have been to like this
(Zaire -> Uganda). The traffic was slow and there was very little of
it. There was just a sign reminding you to swap sides.
Lynn Garry Salmon, salmon@cco.caltech.edu, writes:
The border crossing from China (where they drive on the right) to
Pakistan (where they drive on the left) merely has a sign at the side
of the road that says "Entering Pakistan, Drive Left" and for those
going the other way "Entering China, Drive Right".
agsmith@matai.vuw.ac.nz, writes:
Usually you don't drive straight through a border post. The only place
I've crossed a land border where the side of the road for driving
changes is between Afghanistan and Pakistan. We drove into a car park
(using the right hand side) and after the border formalities, drove
out using the left hand side.
Douglas Clark, dclark@hk.gin.net, writes:
Both Hong Kong and Macao drive on the left and China on the right. In
each case, now, when you cross the border, you do so through a car
park/customs area and merely exit onto the correct side of the road.
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4. OTHER INTERESTING TIDBITS
Napoleon marched on the right
Mark Brader writes: "...a Toronto Star article of October 21, 1991... notes
that in Europe, left-side driving was once the general rule, but it was
promulgated by the popes; Robespierre changed France to the right,
apparently to weaken papal influence over everyday lives. Then Napoleon's
armies also marched on the right, and other countries that he invaded
changed perforce."
Changing from one side to the other
Trevor Jordan (tjordan@pa.ausom.net.au) says, "The Channel Isles drove on
the right, under German influence, in the early 1940s just as the Falkland
Islands did, under Argentine influence, in the early 1980s... the influence
of conquerors did not end with Napoleon but has not generally been as great
or as permanent."
Malcolm Roe (mdr@hplb.hpl.hp.com) writes, "Sweden changed from driving on
the left to driving on the right in the 1960s. This, of course, was because
all its neighbours drove on the right. I remember the newspaper reports of
this happening. The roads were completely closed, apart from emergency
vehicles, for a day or two while changes were made to road signs etc. I
think this was over a weekend. Then a very low speed limit was applied
which was raised in a number of steps. The whole process, if I remember
correctly, took about a month. Everyone knew that it was going to happen
several years before and started to buy left hand drive vehicles so, by the
time the change ocurred, many of the vehicles had been replaced.
Mark Brader notes that until the 1920s, the 10 present Canadian provinces
were split 5-5 between driving on the right and the left.
Those who really have it tough
Almost always, in countries where one drives on the right-hand side of the
road, the cars are built so that the driver sits on the left-hand side of
the car. Conversely, driving on the left-hand side of the road usually
implies that the driver's seat is on the right-hand side of the car. The
driver generally sits on the side of the car that is nearest the
centreline. However, this is not universally true.
Joe Flake notes that in 1983, he visited St Thomas (US Virgin Islands) and
found that one drives on the left side of the road, but the cars are all
US-standard, with the driver sitting on the left-hand side of the car.
"Confusing enough to be on the "wrong" side, but passing on the narrow
roads was a real treat. You really depend on the passenger! Ease out across
the center line and get either approval or a loud 'NO!' from the
passenger."
Malcolm Roe says that in Cyprus, both north and south, they drive on the
left. "However, because of the political isolation of the North, vehicles
are imported from Turkey, mostly second hand. As a consequence the same
situation has arisen as in the US Virgin Islands: i.e., left hand drive
cars driven on the left."
And what about trains?
Rui Gustavo Crespo, rgs@eniac.insec.pt, notes (09 June 1994) that there is
a similar problem with trains, where double track exists. "In Netherlands
trains run on the right, but in Belgium they move on the left. Last Sunday
I travelled between the two countries. At Roosendal (a Dutch city close to
the border), the train stopped at the railway station and had to wait for
permission to move to the left track: from then, although we were still in
Netherlands, our train was conducted on the left."
Mark Brader comments that in France, road traffic is on the right but
trains run on the left, with a few exceptions: "the Paris Metro (and I
think one line of Paris's RER commuter system, that line being run by the
city transit system [RATP] rather than the national railway [SNCF]); I
don't know why. The other is the border district, Alsace-Lorraine, that was
part of Germany for a while: the Germans had standardized it to their
system and the French decided it wasn't worth 'fixing'."
Mark also says that "Most trains in Britain operate on the left, like road
traffic, but there are a number of short sections on the London Underground
where for one reason or another they operate on the right."
In the USA and Canada, trains generally keep to the right, but Don Howard
(DHoward@jht.com) and Eric Zimmerman (edz@fnal.gov) point out one
exception: the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad. The C&NW was bought by
Union Pacific in the mid-1990's, but Eric wrote in 1998 that he rides the
former C&NW lines around Chicago every week on the left track. Two reasons
have been suggested for the C&NW's left-hand operation. Perhaps its
original construction was financed by British capital, which influenced the
track plans. Perhaps the stations (oriented for inbound traffic) were
arbitrarily placed on the current side of the tracks when the line was
single-track and so the side didn't matter, and when the second track was
added (to carry outbound trains) it was impractical to change all the
station alignments so the outbound track ended up on the left.
And boats?
Rob Dvorak, Dvorak@ccit.arizona.edu, writes (20 Feb 1997), "It's nice to
know all shipping and boating is keep to the right. Even in the GB
intercostal waterways and canals it is keep to the right. I wonder how the
British like that?"
5. POPULATION DISTRIBUTION
Analysis by Bernd Wechner, b.wechner@aitec.edu.au, November 1996
Having often encountered the implicit assumption that everyone but England
and some of her colonies drive on the right side of the road, I compiled
from the above list, a quick table of populations to provide a clue as to
just how evenly the sides are represented. As it turns out, some 4 billion
people drive right, and 2 billion drive left (when they drive at all that
is). So a goodly third of the world drives on the left.
Right Side Drivers Left Side Drivers
China, Mainland 1,210,004,956 India 952,107,694
United States 265,562,845 Indonesia 206,611,600
Brazil 162,661,214 Pakistan 129,275,660
Russia 148,178,487 Japan 125,449,703
Nigeria 103,912,489 Bangladesh 123,062,800
Mexico 95,772,462 Thailand 58,851,357
Germany 83,536,115 United Kingdom 58,489,975
Philippines 74,480,848 South Africa 41,743,459
Vietnam 73,976,973 Tanzania 29,058,470
Iran 66,094,264 Kenya 28,176,686
Egypt 63,575,107 Nepal 22,094,033
Turkey 62,484,478 Uganda 20,158,176
France 58,040,988 Malaysia 19,962,893
Italy 57,460,274 Sri Lanka 18,553,074
Ethiopia 57,171,662 Australia 18,260,863
Ukraine 50,864,009 Mozambique 17,877,927
Zaire 46,498,539 Zimbabwe 11,271,314
Burma 45,975,625 Somalia 9,639,151
South Korea 45,482,291 Malawi 9,452,844
Spain 39,181,114 Zambia 9,159,072
Poland 38,642,565 Hong Kong 6,305,413
Colombia 36,813,161 Papua New Guinea 4,394,537
Argentina 34,672,997 Ireland 3,566,833
Sudan 31,065,229 New Zealand 3,547,983
Morocco 29,779,156 Singapore 3,396,924
Algeria 29,183,032 Jamaica 2,595,275
Canada 28,820,671 Lesotho 1,970,781
Peru 24,523,408 Bhutan 1,822,625
North Korea 23,904,124 Namibia 1,677,243
Uzbekistan 23,418,381 Botswana 1,477,630
Afghanistan 22,664,136 Trinidad and Tobago 1,272,385
Venezuela 21,983,188 Mauritius 1,140,256
Romania 21,657,162 Swaziland 998,730
China, Taiwan 21,465,881 Fiji 782,381
Iraq 21,422,292 Cyprus 744,609
Saudi Arabia 19,409,058 Guyana 712,091
Ghana 17,698,271 Macau 496,837
Kazakstan 16,916,463 Suriname 436,418
Syria 15,608,648 Solomon Islands 412,902
Netherlands 15,568,034 Malta 375,576
Ivory Coast 14,762,445 Brunei 299,939
Chile 14,333,258 Maldives 270,758
Cameroon 14,261,557 Bahamas, The 259,367
Madagascar 13,670,507 Barbados 257,030
Yemen 13,483,178 Saint Lucia 157,862
Ecuador 11,466,291 Saint Vincent 118,344
Guatemala 11,277,614 Virgin Island 97,120
Cuba 10,951,334 Grenada 94,961
Cambodia 10,861,218 Dominica 82,926
Burkina Faso 10,623,323 Kiribati 80,919
Greece 10,538,594 Seychelles 77,575
Belarus 10,415,973 Antigua and Barbuda 65,647
Angola 10,342,899 Guernsey 62,920
Czech Republic 10,321,120 Bermuda 62,099
Belgium 10,170,241 Saint Kitts and Nevis 41,369
Hungary 10,002,541 Cook Islands 19,561
Serbia 9,979,116 Turks and Caicos Islands 14,302
Portugal 9,865,114 British Virgin Islands 13,195
Mali 9,653,261 Anguilla 10,424
Niger 9,113,001 Nauru 10,273
Senegal 9,092,749 Tuvalu 10,146
Tunisia 9,019,687
Sweden 8,900,954
Bulgaria 8,612,757
Dominican Republic 8,088,881
Austria 8,023,244
Azerbaijan 7,676,953
Guinea 7,411,981
Switzerland 7,207,060
Bolivia 7,165,257
Chad 6,976,845
Rwanda 6,853,359
Haiti 6,731,539
Burundi 5,943,057
Tajikistan 5,916,373
El Salvador 5,828,987
Benin 5,709,529
Honduras 5,605,193
Paraguay 5,504,146
Libya 5,445,436
Israel 5,421,995
Slovakia 5,374,362
Denmark 5,249,632
Georgia 5,219,810
Finland 5,105,230
Croatia 5,004,112
Laos 4,975,772
Sierra Leone 4,793,121
Togo 4,570,530
Kyrgyzstan 4,529,648
Moldova 4,463,847
Norway 4,383,807
Nicaragua 4,272,352
Jordan 4,212,152
Turkmenistan 4,149,283
Eritrea 3,909,628
Lebanon 3,776,317
Lithuania 3,646,041
Armenia 3,463,574
Costa Rica 3,463,083
Central African 3,274,426
Albania 3,249,136
Uruguay 3,238,952
United Arab Emirates 3,057,337
Bosnia and Herzegov. 2,656,240
Panama 2,655,094
Congo 2,527,841
Mongolia 2,496,617
Latvia 2,468,982
Mauritania 2,336,048
Oman 2,186,548
Liberia 2,109,789
Macedonia 2,104,035
Slovenia 1,951,443
Kuwait 1,950,047
Estonia 1,459,428
West Bank 1,427,741
Gambia, The 1,204,984
Gabon 1,172,798
Guinea-Bissau 1,151,330
Gaza Strip 923,940
Bahrain 590,042
Comoros 569,237
Qatar 547,761
Cape Verde 449,066
Equatorial Guinea 431,282
Djibouti 427,642
Luxembourg 415,870
Iceland 270,292
Western Sahara 222,631
Belize 219,296
Western Samoa 214,384
Vanuatu 177,504
Guam 156,974
Sao Tome 144,128
Micronesia 125,377
Andorra 72,766
Marshall Islands 58,363
Northern Mariana 52,284
Monaco 31,719
Liechtenstein 31,122
Gibraltar 28,765
San Marino 24,521
Wallis and Futuna 14,659
Total 3,814,799,906 Total 1,949,490,917
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Brian Lucas, lucas@travel-library.com
[Image] Rec.Travel Library worldwide travel information