Right of way ≠ survival of the fittest at intersections
Let’s stop confusing the two 😅
In theory, the right-hand priority rule in Belgium is simple.
In practice?
Some intersections look more like an improvised diplomatic negotiation between stressed drivers 🚙, fearless cyclists 🚴 and pedestrians who have completely lost faith in humanity 🚶♂️💀
📖 What Belgian law actually says
Under Belgian traffic law, when there are no traffic signs regulating priority, drivers must give way to vehicles coming from the right.
✅ Simple.
✅ Clear.
✅ Civilized.
Well… at least on paper 📄
Because at real-life intersections, many drivers seem to follow completely different rules:
- 🚘 “My car is bigger, so I go first.”
- ⏰ “I’m in a hurry.”
- 👀 “I looked at you, so you should understand my intentions.”
- 🤏 “I was already halfway in.”
- 👋 “Someone waved me through.”
- 🧓 “I’ve known this intersection for 20 years.”
⚖️ Legal spoiler alert:
none of these rules exist in the Belgian Highway Code.
👋 The classic: “But he let me go first”
This usually comes up after an accident 💥
One driver says:
🙋 “Yes, but the other driver waved me through.”
The other responds:
😤 “Yes, but he was supposed to give me priority.”
Welcome to the wonderful world of traffic litigation ⚖️🚓
Because legally speaking, right of way does not magically disappear because someone made a vague hand gesture resembling a papal blessing ✋⛪
Courts will analyze:
- 📍 priority rules,
- 🚦 negligent behavior,
- 👀 expected caution,
- 🌫️ visibility,
- 🏎️ speed,
- 🤷 and sometimes even… the interpretation of “the gesture.”
Yes, a simple wave of the hand can end up in a legal file hundreds of pages long 📚
🚦 Belgian intersections: a laboratory of human behavior
Unregulated intersections are fascinating 🔬
They are places where:
- 😇 some people suddenly rediscover the right-hand priority rule,
- 🙈 others completely ignore it,
- 🤝 and a few decide to become aggressively polite.
The “overly polite driver” is actually a dangerous species 🐼
They let everyone pass.
They block traffic 🚗🚗🚗
They create hesitation 😬
And sometimes… they cause accidents 💥
⚖️ Traffic law generally prefers predictability over spontaneous generosity.
🤔 “I thought he was going to stop”
One of the greatest hits in intersection accidents 🏆
Belgian traffic law relies heavily on:
- 🔍 anticipation,
- ⚠️ caution,
- 🚘 reasonable driving behavior.
In other words:
Even if:
- ✅ you have priority,
- ✅ you are legally right,
- ✅ the other driver made a mistake,
that does not allow you to storm through an intersection like a Roman conqueror entering Brussels 🛡️🐎
Having priority never removes the duty to remain careful.
🔁 Turn signals: society’s greatest fiction
Special mention for the driver who:
- 👉 turns on the right indicator,
- 👀 looks left,
- ⬆️ then drives straight ahead.
Belgian law unfortunately does not recognize telepathy as an official traffic communication system 🧠📡
🏁 Conclusion: right of way is a legal rule, not a gut feeling
An intersection is not:
- ❌ a philosophical debate,
- ❌ an improvisation exercise,
- ❌ a mind-reading contest.
It is a place where:
- ⚖️ rules matter,
- 🚦 caution matters,
- 💸 and where “I thought…” can become very expensive.
The right-hand priority rule remains a fundamental principle of Belgian traffic law 🇧🇪
The challenge is distinguishing:
- 📘 what the law actually says,
- 🤯 from what people invent in the middle of the intersection.
Because between legal theory and real-life traffic…
there are often several honks of difference 🚗📢😅
For all questions related to road traffic law, don’t forget to contact your favourite lawyer. 🚗⚖️