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Lesson 4 of the GB Road Signs and Traffic Signals unit

GB Category B Theory: Traffic Light Sequences and Phases

This lesson guides you through the standard traffic light sequences used across Great Britain, ensuring you know how to react to every signal. It builds upon your understanding of road junctions and lane discipline to prepare you for critical exam questions on light phases and filter arrows.

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GB Category B Theory: Traffic Light Sequences and Phases

Lesson content overview

GB Category B Theory

Understanding Traffic Light Sequences and Phases in Great Britain

Traffic lights, officially known as traffic control signals, are a fundamental part of road safety and traffic management in Great Britain. They provide a clear visual system for allocating the right-of-way at junctions, crossings, and other points of potential conflict on the road. For Category B learner drivers, mastering the interpretation of these sequences and phases is not just about passing a theory test; it is essential for safe navigation, legal compliance, and preventing collisions.

This lesson will delve into the full operation and meaning of traffic lights, from the standard red, amber, and green signals to more specialised phases like red-and-amber, flashing amber, and green filter arrows. Understanding the precise timing and legal implications of each signal will empower you to make informed decisions, anticipate traffic flow, and ensure predictable behaviour on the road.

The Importance of Traffic Signals for Safe Driving

Traffic lights play a critical role in maintaining order and safety at complex intersections where multiple streams of vehicles and pedestrians converge. Without them, junctions would be chaotic, leading to frequent delays and a high risk of accidents. The carefully designed sequences and phases prevent collisions by giving specific road users clear instructions on when to stop, when to prepare, and when to proceed.

The underlying logic of traffic light sequencing is built on principles of safety, timing, and legal clarity. Clear signals reduce reaction time and minimise confusion, while transition phases (like red-amber and steady amber) accommodate the physical realities of vehicle acceleration and deceleration. The Highway Code translates these principles into mandatory actions for drivers, ensuring a universal understanding and response to each signal.

Core Traffic Light Colours and Their Meanings

Every driver must understand the basic hierarchy and meaning of the three primary traffic light colours: red, amber, and green. These form the foundation of all traffic light sequences.

The Red Light: Stop Immediately

A steady red light is the most decisive signal at a junction, serving as an absolute command to stop. When you see a steady red light, you must bring your vehicle to a complete halt before the white stop line. If there is no stop line, you must stop before the junction itself, or before a pedestrian crossing. This rule applies even if the road ahead appears clear, as traffic from another direction may be permitted to proceed.

The purpose of the red light is to prevent vehicles from entering the junction when cross-traffic or pedestrians have priority. Ignoring a red light is a serious offence and a major cause of collisions. You must remain stationary until the signal changes to green, or, in specific circumstances, to a green arrow for a permitted turning movement.

The Steady Amber Light: Prepare to Stop

A steady amber light follows a green light and signifies that the signal is about to change to red. Its primary purpose is to warn drivers to prepare to stop. Upon seeing a steady amber light, you must stop behind the white stop line, just as you would for a red light.

However, there is an important exception, known as the "commitment rule." If you are so close to the stop line when the amber light appears that stopping safely would require sudden, harsh braking, or would cause a collision with a vehicle behind you, then you may proceed carefully through the junction. This rule does not give you permission to accelerate to 'beat' the light; it is a safety provision for unavoidable situations. You should always aim to anticipate signal changes and be prepared to stop.

The Red-Amber Phase: Prepare to Go

The red-amber phase is a unique signal in Great Britain, where both the red and steady amber lights are illuminated simultaneously. This phase always appears before the green light. Its practical meaning is a preparatory cue: drivers must get ready to move, as the green light is imminent.

Crucially, during the red-amber phase, drivers must not move into the junction. The signal is strictly for preparation. Moving off prematurely is illegal and extremely dangerous, as cross-traffic or pedestrians might still have the right-of-way. The only exception to this rule is if a green arrow for a specific turning movement is also displayed concurrently, in which case only traffic following that arrow may proceed, with caution. Always wait for the full green light before commencing your journey, unless an explicit green arrow permits an earlier turn.

The Green Light: Proceed If Safe

A steady green light indicates that you are permitted to proceed, provided it is safe to do so. This means you can drive straight ahead, turn left, or turn right, assuming there are no other signs or road markings that prohibit such movements.

However, a green light does not grant absolute right-of-way. You must always check that the junction is clear before moving off. This includes looking for any vehicles already in the intersection, pedestrians still crossing, or cyclists. You must give way to any vehicle that has entered the junction from another direction or to pedestrians who are still crossing, even if their signal has turned red. Proceed with caution and ensure your path is clear before accelerating.

Special Traffic Light Signals and Filter Arrows

Beyond the primary red, amber, and green signals, traffic lights in Great Britain employ various specialised signals and arrows to manage complex traffic flow, particularly at busy intersections or those with specific turning requirements.

Amber Arrow Filters for Turning Movements

An amber arrow displayed on a traffic light signal indicates that traffic may turn in the direction of the arrow. This signal is typically used to allow specific turning movements while other movements (e.g., going straight) are prohibited, often by an accompanying red or steady amber light for those other directions.

If you see an amber arrow for your intended turning movement, you may proceed with the turn, but you must do so with caution and give way to any traffic already on the main road or pedestrians crossing your path. It is vital not to interpret an amber arrow as a signal to go in any direction other than the one indicated, or to proceed without checking for hazards.

Green Arrow Filters for Specific Directions

A green arrow displayed on a traffic light permits a specific turning movement. This arrow can appear alone, or alongside a red or amber light for other traffic movements. Its purpose is to create an exclusive phase for turning traffic, thereby reducing conflicts with oncoming vehicles or pedestrians.

When a green arrow is illuminated for your direction, you may proceed with the turn, provided it is safe. For example, a green left-turn arrow might allow you to turn left while straight-ahead traffic faces a red light. You must remain within the lane designated for that turning movement and always give way to any pedestrians who may be crossing your path. Do not assume a green arrow means you can go straight or turn in a different direction.

General Flashing Amber Lights: Give Way

A flashing amber light, distinct from the steady amber that precedes red, is used in specific contexts to indicate that drivers must proceed with caution and give way. It typically appears at two main locations:

  • At Junctions: On minor road approaches to a priority road, a flashing amber light indicates that you must give way to traffic on the main (priority) road. You should slow down, be prepared to stop, and only proceed when it is safe to do so without impeding priority traffic.
  • At Pedestrian Crossings (Pelican Crossings): After the red light for vehicles, a flashing amber light will appear at Pelican crossings. During this phase, you must stop if there are any pedestrians on the crossing. If the crossing is clear, you may proceed cautiously.

The crucial takeaway for a flashing amber light is that it is not a "go" signal in the same way a steady green light is. It always implies a reduced priority, requiring you to yield to other road users or traffic that has the right-of-way.

Pedestrian Crossing Signals and Driver Responsibilities

Pedestrian crossings often incorporate traffic light signals to manage the safe passage of people across the road. Drivers must be fully aware of these signals and their associated responsibilities.

The Red Man and Green Man: Pedestrian Right-of-Way

At signalised pedestrian crossings, you will see 'man' symbols:

  • Steady Red Man: This indicates that pedestrians must not start to cross the road.
  • Steady Green Man: This indicates that pedestrians may commence crossing.

As a driver, when you approach a crossing where the green man is illuminated, you must anticipate that pedestrians will be crossing. Even if your vehicle light is green, you are legally obliged to stop and give way to any pedestrians who are already on the crossing. You should only proceed once the crossing is completely clear.

The Flashing Green Man: Pedestrians Completing Crossing

Sometimes, the green man symbol will begin to flash. This signal means that pedestrians may continue crossing if they are already on the road, but they should not start to cross if they are still on the pavement.

For drivers, a flashing green man is a critical warning. You must stop and give way to any pedestrian who is still on the crossing. It is a common mistake for drivers to proceed as soon as their vehicle light turns green, potentially endangering pedestrians who are still making their way across. Always ensure the crossing is entirely clear before moving off.

Adhering to traffic light signals is not merely a suggestion; it is a mandatory legal requirement outlined in The Highway Code. Violations can lead to severe penalties, including fines and penalty points on your licence, in addition to the inherent dangers of causing an accident.

Mandatory Actions at Traffic Lights

Here are the key mandatory actions for drivers at traffic lights in Great Britain:

  • Stop at Red: You must stop completely before the stop line, or before the junction if no line is present. Entering a junction against a red light is a serious offence.
  • Red-Amber Phase: No Movement: During the red-amber phase, you must remain stationary. This is a preparatory signal only. The only exception is if a green arrow for a specific turn is simultaneously displayed, permitting that specific movement.
  • Steady Amber Light: Stop if Safe: You must stop when the light turns steady amber, unless you are so close to the stop line that doing so would be unsafe or cause a collision. In such cases, you may proceed with extreme caution.
  • Green Light: Proceed if Safe: You may proceed when the light is green, but you must first ensure the junction is clear of all other vehicles and pedestrians. You must yield to anyone already in the intersection or on a crossing.
  • Arrow Signals: Follow Direction: Obey the direction indicated by green or amber arrows. These signals apply only to the specific movement shown by the arrow; other movements remain prohibited if their corresponding light is red or amber.
  • Flashing Amber (at junctions): Give Way: You must yield to traffic on the priority road before entering the junction.
  • Flashing Amber (at pedestrian crossings): Stop for Pedestrians: You must stop if pedestrians are on the crossing. You may proceed cautiously if the crossing is clear.
  • Pedestrian Green Man: Give Way: Always stop for pedestrians on the crossing when the green man (steady or flashing) is displayed.

Common Violations and How to Avoid Them

Familiarity with traffic light rules helps drivers avoid common errors and violations:

  1. Moving on Red-Amber without a Green Arrow: Many drivers mistakenly think red-amber means "go now." This is a significant risk, as cross-traffic may still have priority. Always wait for a steady green or a specific green arrow.
  2. Failing to Stop on Flashing Amber: Treating a flashing amber at a minor road as a full green light can lead to entering a priority road without yielding, resulting in serious side-impact collisions. Always yield to traffic on the main road.
  3. Ignoring Pedestrians on a Flashing Green Man: Drivers sometimes assume that because their light is green, pedestrians no longer have priority. You must always allow pedestrians to finish crossing.
  4. Entering a Junction on Steady Amber When Unsafe to Clear: Accelerating to 'beat the light' on a steady amber is illegal and dangerous. If you cannot safely clear the junction, you must stop.
  5. Misinterpreting Green Arrows: Assuming a green arrow for a turn means you can go straight can lead to entering the path of vehicles with a green light for straight-through traffic. Always follow the specific direction of the arrow.
  6. Not Checking the Junction on Green: Even with a green light, you must confirm the junction is clear of any vehicles or pedestrians who might be delayed or have made an error. Never assume absolute right-of-way.

Adapting to Conditions: Contextual Variations

The interpretation and safe response to traffic light signals can be influenced by various external factors. Safe driving requires adapting your approach based on current conditions.

Weather and Visibility Considerations

Adverse weather conditions significantly impact how you should react to traffic lights:

  • Rain, Ice, Snow: These conditions drastically increase stopping distances. When approaching a light that changes to amber, you must anticipate needing a much longer distance to stop safely. Begin braking earlier than you would in dry conditions.
  • Low Visibility (Fog, Heavy Rain, Night Driving): Reduced visibility makes it harder to see traffic lights from a distance, or to gauge the speed of other vehicles. You may need to slow down well in advance of a junction and be extra cautious when judging whether it is safe to proceed on a green light, especially looking out for pedestrians or vehicles that might be harder to spot.

Road Type and Junction Complexity

The type of road and the complexity of the junction also influence traffic light interpretation:

  • Urban Junctions: These often feature more complex signal arrangements, including multiple lanes, dedicated turning arrows, and integrated pedestrian crossings with flashing amber phases. Stay vigilant and ensure you are in the correct lane for your intended movement.
  • Residential Streets: Minor road approaches in residential areas may frequently use flashing amber lights, requiring drivers to give way to traffic on the main road. Be prepared for less predictable traffic patterns.
  • Motorway Slip Roads: While less common, some slip roads joining motorways may have traffic lights, often using green arrows, to manage the flow of merging traffic. Always obey these signals and adjust your speed accordingly for merging.

Vehicle State and Vulnerable Road Users

Your vehicle's characteristics and the presence of vulnerable road users also demand adjusted driving:

  • Heavy Load or Trailer: Vehicles with heavy loads or trailers require significantly longer stopping distances. This means you must react even earlier to an amber light, ensuring you have ample space to stop safely without causing a hazard.
  • Vulnerable Road Users (Pedestrians, Cyclists, Motorcyclists): Always pay extra attention to pedestrians and cyclists at junctions. They may not be as easily seen, or their movements can be less predictable. Cyclists may have advanced green signals, giving them priority to move off before other traffic. You must always give way to pedestrians on a crossing, even if your light is green, and be mindful of motorcycles that might be ahead of your vehicle at the stop line.

Safety Insights and Driving Principles

Understanding traffic light sequences goes hand-in-hand with core driving safety principles. The design of these signals reflects human factors and the physics of driving:

  • Visibility & Reaction Times: The time delays built into signal changes (e.g., the red-amber phase) account for average human reaction times (around 0.75 seconds to perceive and process a signal change) plus the time needed for vehicles to start or stop. This buffer helps prevent collisions.
  • Psychology of Expectancy: Drivers generally expect a green light after a red-amber phase. Unanticipated changes, such as a sudden green arrow for a specific lane while others remain red, require clear, unambiguous signalling to prevent confusion.
  • Physics of Braking: As mentioned, wet or icy roads dramatically increase braking distances. Traffic light phases are designed for optimal conditions, requiring drivers to actively adjust their braking strategy in adverse weather.
  • Risk Mitigation: The use of flashing amber signals at non-priority roads is a key risk mitigation strategy. It explicitly tells drivers they do not have the right-of-way, significantly reducing the likelihood of dangerous side-impact collisions at junctions.

By internalising these insights, you can move beyond simply memorising rules to truly understanding the safety rationale behind each traffic light signal, becoming a more proactive and responsible driver.

Essential Vocabulary for Traffic Light Sequences

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Lesson recap

Quick summary before you move on

Fast revision

This lesson covers the complete sequence and meaning of traffic light signals used in Great Britain, from basic red, amber, and green phases to specialised filter arrows and flashing amber lights at pedestrian crossings. Key rules include the mandatory stop on red, the preparation-only red-and-amber phase requiring a green arrow for movement, the commitment rule allowing cautious progression on amber when already committed, and the conditional proceed on green requiring a clear junction check. Understanding pedestrian signals like the flashing green man and driver obligations at each phase is essential for both safe driving and theory test preparation. The lesson also addresses contextual factors including weather conditions, vehicle types, and vulnerable road users that affect safe traffic light navigation.


Core takeaways

Main ideas from this lesson

A short set of high-value points that capture the most important learning from this lesson.

A steady red light is an absolute command to stop completely before the stop line or junction, regardless of road conditions ahead

The red-and-amber phase is a preparatory signal only; you must not move unless a green arrow specifically permits your turning movement

A steady amber light requires you to stop unless you are so close to the stop line that stopping safely would cause a collision (the commitment rule)

A green light grants permission to proceed but does not give absolute right-of-way; you must always check the junction is clear of vehicles and pedestrians

Green and amber filter arrows apply only to the specific turning movement they indicate; other directions remain prohibited if their light is red or amber

Remember this

Details worth keeping in mind

Point 1

Red = mandatory stop; never enter the junction against a red light

Point 2

Red-Amber = prepare to move; no movement unless a green arrow for your specific turn is simultaneously displayed

Point 3

Steady Amber = stop unless committed (commitment rule); never accelerate to beat the light

Point 4

Flashing Amber = give way to priority traffic at junctions or stop for pedestrians at Pelican crossings

Point 5

Flashing Green Man = pedestrians already on the crossing have right-of-way; you must stop until the crossing is completely clear

Watch for this

Frequent learner mistakes

Moving off on red-and-amber without a green arrow, assuming it means 'get ready to go now'

Treating a flashing amber at a minor road as a full green light and entering a priority road without yielding

Proceeding on green without checking for pedestrians still completing their crossing during the flashing green man phase

Misinterpreting a green arrow as permission to proceed straight or turn in a different direction than indicated

Assuming a green light means absolute right-of-way and failing to give way to vehicles or pedestrians already in the junction

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Frequently asked questions about Traffic Light Sequences and Phases

Find clear answers to common questions learners have about Traffic Light Sequences and Phases. Learn how the lesson is structured, which driving theory objectives it supports, and how it fits into the overall learning path of units and curriculum progression in Great Britain. These explanations help you understand key concepts, lesson flow, and exam focused study goals.

What does the red-and-amber light signal mean in the UK?

The red-and-amber light indicates that the signal is about to change to green. You should be prepared to move off when the green light appears, but you must not pass through the signal until it turns green.

Can I turn left at a red light if there is no traffic?

No. In Great Britain, you must always stop at a red traffic light unless you are instructed to proceed by a police officer or other authorized traffic controller. There is no 'right turn on red' convention.

What is a green filter arrow?

A green filter arrow gives you permission to proceed in the direction indicated by the arrow, even if the main circular traffic light is red. It is often used to allow traffic to turn safely without conflicting with oncoming vehicles.

What should I do if the traffic lights are out of order?

Treat the junction as an unmarked crossroads. Proceed with extreme caution, look out for other road users who may not be following priority rules, and be prepared to stop if necessary.

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