Left Hand Drive Trivia

Why do we drive on the wrong side of the road? And why is the steering wheel on the left?

For the answers to these and other tantalising auto-queries you’ve always wondered about…read on!

In days of old, common sense dictated that when people passed each other on the road they should be in the best possible position to defend themselves if attacked. As most people were right handed (and held their swords in their right hands) they generally kept to the left. This practice was even formalised by the Pope around 1300 AD when he advised his pilgrims to keep to the left!

Centuries later the ‘keep left’ practice was enforced once again, this time by the UK government's General Highways Act of 1773, which came about due to the increase in horse traffic. The in 1835 the keep left order became law as part of the Highways Bill.

So why do they travel on the right elsewhere?

It’s believed that the French actually travelled on the left until the French Revolution. Before the revolution the French aristocracy drove their carriages at such speed the 'peasants' were forced to use the right side of the road. During the revolution the aristocracy took to using the right so as to 'blend in' and avoid being guillotined! Britain and France were both big colonial powers in the past and so it's likely that they imposed their 'keep right' or 'keep left' rule on their territories abroad.

Here's more trivia for you!

The first cars followed in the footsteps of horse-drawn carriages and the driver was seated in the middle. It wasn't long however before chauffeurs gave way to drivers and drivers naturally wanted a passenger to be able to sit beside them. Manufacturers chose to put the steering wheel on the right or left depending which side of the road their country favoured. So in Germany the steering wheel’s on the left because they drive on the right.

In 1921, Audi became the first German car manufacturer to design a left hand drive car, the Audi Type K. They did this to give the driver a better view of oncoming traffic, making manoeuvres such as overtaking safer. Not surprisingly, such logical thinking inspired other car manufacturers to follow suit and left hand drive cars prevailed by the end of the 1920s.

Earlier still, in 1897 Charles Jeffery of the US manufacturing company Gormully & Jeffery built two left hand drive, front mounted engine cars, highly unusual for US cars of that time. By 1902, the company was producing 1,500 vehicles a year, a figure only surpassed by the Curved Dash Olds.

Safety is the main reason to switch to left hand drive, a criteria adopted by NATO in 1950 when they ordered that all military vehicles used on the Continent should be left hand drive.

So is the UK likely to switch sides?

It's unlikely given the impracticalities. Imagine attempting to enforce a change like that in today's traffic! And, it just so happens that the world's largest car producer - Japan - drives on the left, so naturally produces right hand drive cars for its own domestic market as well as for export.

Who drives what, where?

The rule of thumb is that islands drive on the left and have right hand drive cars. But confusingly, there are exceptions. The United States Virgin Islands for instance, drives on the left in left-hand drive vehicles!

A more accurate rule is that places bordering the Indian Ocean along with some island countries elsewhere in the world, drive on the left. But there are still exceptions. If you'd like to find out more there's a great book available by Peter Kincaid called 'The Rule of the Road: An International Guide to History and Practice' (published by Greenwood Press ISBN 0-313-25249-1).

Here's a rough guide to who drives left hand drive cars (LHD), who drives right hand drive cars (RHD) and who doesn’t know!

    LHD - countries who drive on the right side of the road (drivers usually sit on the left).

    RHD - countries who drive on the left side of the road (drivers usually sit on the right).

    NCE - uninhabited countries/no convention established

    RHD LHD NCE
    Anguilla
    Antigua and Barbuda
    Australia
    Bahamas
    Bangladesh
    Barbados
    Cook Islands
    Cyprus
    Dominica
    Fiji
    Grenada
    Guyana
    India
    Indonesia
    Ireland
    Jamaica
    Japan
    Kenya
    Kiribati Republic
    Lesotho
    Macao
    Malawi
    Malaysia
    Maldives
    Malta
    Mauritius
    Mozambique
    Namibia
    Nauru
    Nepal
    New Zealand
    Pakistan
    Papua New Guinea
    Saint Kitts Nevis
    Saint Lucia
    Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
    Seychelles
    Singapore
    Solomon Islands
    South Africa
    Sri Lanka
    Suriname
    Swaziland
    Tanzania
    Thailand
    Timor
    Tokelau
    Tonga
    Trinidad & Tobago
    Turks & Caicos Islands
    Tuvalu
    Uganda
    Zambia
    Zimbabwe
    Afghanistan
    Albania
    Algeria
    Andorra
    Angola
    Argentina
    Austria
    Bahrain
    Belgium
    Belize
    Benin
    Bolivia
    Brazil
    Bulgaria
    Burkina Faso
    Burundi
    Cameroon
    Canada
    Cape Verde
    Central African Republic
    Chad
    Chile
    People's Republic of China
    Columbia
    Comoros
    Congo
    Costa Rica
    Cuba
    Czech Republic
    Denmark
    Djibouti
    Dominican Republic
    Ecuador
    Egypt
    El Salvador
    Equatorial Guinea
    Ethiopia
    Finland
    France
    Gabon
    Gambia
    Germany
    Ghana
    Gibraltar
    Greece
    Guam
    Guatemala
    Guinea
    Guinea-Bissau
    Haiti
    Honduras
    Hungary
    Iceland
    Iran
    Iraq
    Israel
    Italy
    Ivory Coast
    Jordan
    Kampuchea
    North Korea
    South Korea
    Kuwait
    Laos
    Lebanon
    Liberia
    Libya
    Liechtenstein
    Luxembourg
    Madagascar
    Mali
    Marshall Islands
    Mauritania
    Mexico
    Micronesia
    Monaco
    Mongolia
    Morocco
    Myanmar
    Netherlands
    Nicaragua
    Niger
    Nigeria
    Norway
    Oman
    Panama
    Paraguay
    Peru
    Philippines
    Poland
    Portugal
    Qatar
    Romania
    Rwanda
    San Marino
    Sao Tome e Principe
    Saudi Arabia
    Senegal
    Sierra Leone
    Somalia
    Spain
    Sudan
    Sweden
    Switzerland
    Syria
    Taiwan
    Togolese Republic
    Tunisia
    Turkey
    Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
    United States Virgin Islands
    Uruguay
    Vanuatu
    Vatican City State
    Venezuela
    Vietnam
    Wallis & Futuna Islands
    Western Sahara
    Western Samoa
    Yemen
    Yugoslavia
    Zaire
    Antarctica
    Belau (Palau)
    Northern Mariana Islands