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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 7 March 2025. Directionality of traffic flow by jurisdiction Countries by direction of road traffic, c. 2020 Left-hand traffic Right-hand traffic No data Left-hand traffic (LHT) and right-hand traffic (RHT) are the practices, in bidirectional traffic, of keeping to the left side or to the right side of ...
English: A map indicating which countries drive on the right side of the road, and which drive on the left side, coupled with whether they use kilometers as a distance/speed unit, or miles. Right-hand traffic, kilometers
For countries driving on the left, the convention stipulates that the traffic signs should be mirror images of those used in countries driving on the right. This practice, however, is not systematically followed in the four European countries driving on the left – the United Kingdom, Cyprus, Malta and Ireland.
Some people credit Henry Ford with standardizing US traffic on the right side of the road because, in 1908, Ford Motor Co. put the steering wheel on the left side of the hugely popular Model T ...
From Serbian name "Srbija i Crna Gora". Split into Montenegro and Serbia. Coincided with ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code. SE Saorstát Éireann: 1938 EIR (IRL from 1962) Under GB until 1924. Name changed to Éire, now Ireland: SF Finland: 1993 FIN SF from "Suomi – Finland" (the names of the country in its official languages, Finnish and Swedish) SHS
Reverted to version as of 09:23, 2 April 2019 (UTC) Bulgaria does not drive on the left: 11:07, 3 April 2019: 2,754 × 1,398 (1.06 MB) Newfraferz87: No explanation given for earlier reversion. Stick to optimized file: 09:23, 2 April 2019: 940 × 477 (1.63 MB) Nedops: Reverted to version as of 20:07, 2 September 2016 (UTC) 09:03, 2 April 2019
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More than 90 percent of Swedes drove left-hand-drive vehicles, [5] and this led to many head-on collisions when passing on narrow two-lane highways. [6] City buses were among the very few vehicles that conformed to the normal opposite-steering wheel rule, being right-hand-drive (RHD).