This overview presents all official Austrian road sign categories and traffic sign groups. Effectively prepare for your driving theory exam by understanding the structured classification of signs based on their purpose and context. Learning warning, regulatory, and information signs within their groups enhances comprehension of their legal framework and practical implications for safer driving on Austrian roads.
Organise your Austrian driving theory study by mastering traffic-sign categories and sign families. Browsing by sign groups aids memorisation and quicker understanding of road rules.
Austrian danger signs warn before hazards such as bends, crossings, gradients, rail crossings, roadworks, slippery roads, children, animals, traffic signals, and unusual road layouts. They give drivers time to reduce speed, widen observation, and prepare before reaching the danger point.
Austrian prohibitory signs set binding restrictions on access, turns, overtaking, vehicle categories, dimensions, weight, speed, parking, stopping, and horn use. Drivers must decide whether the sign applies to their vehicle or intended manoeuvre before continuing.
Austrian mandatory signs require a specific direction, route, lane choice, path, minimum speed, snow-chain use, or other compulsory action. They should be matched to the lane and road layout before the driver commits to the manoeuvre.
Austrian priority signs define who may proceed first at junctions, priority roads, and other conflict points. They help drivers decide when to stop, yield, continue with priority, or reassess priority after a priority road ends.
Austrian informational signs identify facilities, road types, crossings, routes, zones, reserved roads, lane layouts, town limits, motorway exits, diversions, and service points. They support planning and orientation without overriding separate regulatory signs.
Austrian additional panels modify another sign by adding length, advance warning, priority-course diagrams, weather conditions, exceptions, lane scope, tow-away information, or electric-vehicle charging exceptions. They must be read with the sign they accompany.
Further Austrian signs cover special traffic-related signs that do not fit neatly into the main warning, regulatory, priority, information, or auxiliary-panel groups. They should still be read as official road information in context.
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