Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Yield sign
Traffic sign From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
In road transport, a yield or give way sign indicates that merging drivers must prepare to stop if necessary to let a driver on another approach proceed. A driver who stops or slows down to let another vehicle through has yielded the right of way to that vehicle. In contrast, a stop sign requires each driver to stop completely before proceeding, whether or not other traffic is present. Under the Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals, the international standard for the modern sign is an inverted equilateral triangle with a red border and either a white or yellow background. Particular regulations regarding appearance, installation, and compliance with the signs vary by some jurisdiction.

Remove ads
Terminology
Summarize
Perspective
While give way and yield essentially have the same meaning in this context, many countries have a clear preference of one term over the other. The following table lists which countries and territories use which term. This chart is based on official government usage in the English language and excludes indirect translations from other languages.
Areas where give way is used
 Anguilla
 Antigua and Barbuda
 Australia
 The Bahamas
 Bahrain
 Bangladesh
 Barbados
 Bermuda
 Bhutan
 Brunei
 Cayman Islands
 Cyprus
 Dominica
 Egypt
 Falkland Islands
 Fiji
 The Gambia
 Ghana
 Gibraltar
 Grenada
 Guernsey
 Guyana
 Hong Kong SAR
 India
 Iran
 Isle of Man
 Israel
 Jamaica
 Jersey
 Jordan
 Kenya
 Kiribati
 Kuwait
 Malawi
 Malaysia
 Maldives
 Malta
 Mauritius
 Montserrat
 Nauru
   Nepal
 New Zealand
 Nigeria
 Pakistan
 Papua New Guinea
 Philippines
 Qatar
 Rwanda
 Saint Kitts and Nevis
 Saint Lucia
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
 Samoa
 Seychelles
 Singapore
 Solomon Islands
 Sri Lanka
 Tanzania
 Thailand
 Tonga
 Trinidad and Tobago
 Turks and Caicos
 Tuvalu
 Uganda
 United Arab Emirates
 United Kingdom
 Vanuatu
 Yemen
 Zambia
 Zimbabwe
Areas where yield is used
Remove ads
History

A black triangle (within the standard down-arrow-shape of stop signs) was a symbol of "stop for all vehicles" from about 1925 in Germany. The triangular yield sign was used as early as 1937, when it was introduced in Denmark in red and white (matching the Danish flag),[1] in 1938 when it was codified in Czechoslovakia in a blue-white variant without words,[2] and in 1939 in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia which adopted the current red-white variant.[3] In the United States, the first yield sign was erected in 1950 in Tulsa, Oklahoma, designed by Tulsa police officer Clinton Riggs;[4][5] Riggs invented only the sign, not the rule, which was already in place.[6] Riggs' original design was shaped like a keystone; later versions bore the shape of an inverted equilateral triangle in common use today. The inverted equilateral triangle was then adopted by the Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals as the international standard.
Remove ads
Country specifics
Summarize
Perspective

Australia
In Australia, the Give Way sign evolved similarly to its counterpart in the United States. During the 1940s and 1950s, the sign was a yellow circle. In 1960, the sign changed to a red triangle. In the 1980s, the sign adopted its modern design and gained a counterpart for use at roundabouts.
- Original design (1940's–1960)
 - Second version (1960–1974)
 - Modern design since 1974
 
Ireland
In Ireland, the yield sign reads yield in most areas, although in Gaeltacht (Irish-speaking) areas the text is géill slí ("yield right of way"[7]) instead.[8][9] Signs erected from 1962 until 1997 read yield right of way,[10] which remains legally permitted.[9] Signs 1956–1962 had a blank white interior.[11]
- 1956–1962
 - 1962–1997
 - English-language version (1997 – present)
 - Irish-language version (1962 – present)
 
New Zealand
In New Zealand, the original design also used the keystone shape as in the US but used a black background with a red border. In the 1970s, the modern design was taken. On sealed roads, the give way sign is always accompanied by a white line painted on the road to clarify the rule to road users even if the sign is obscured or missing.[12]
- Original design (1966–1988)
 - Modern design since 1987
 
United Kingdom



The United Kingdom's Road Traffic Act calls for give way signs and road markings at junctions (crossroads) where the give-way rule is to apply. The road marking accompanying the sign consists of a large inverted triangle painted just before the place to give way, which is marked by broken white lines across the road.[13]
In Wales, some signs bear a bilingual legend: the Welsh ildiwch appears above give way.
In the United Kingdom, a stop or give-way sign may be preceded by an inverted, blank, triangular sign with an advisory placard such as give way 100 yards.[14]
United States
In the Federal Highway Administration's Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, a yield sign may be warranted[15]
"if engineering judgment indicates that one or more of the following conditions exist:
- When the ability to see all potentially conflicting traffic is sufficient to allow a road user traveling at the posted speed, the 85th-percentile speed, or the statutory speed to pass through the intersection or to stop in a reasonably safe manner.
 - If controlling move type movement on the entering roadway where acceleration geometry and/or sight distance is not adequate for merging traffic operation.
 - The second crossroad of a divided highway, where the median width at the intersection is 30 ft or greater. In this case, a STOP sign may be installed at the entrance to the first roadway of a divided highway, and a YIELD sign may be installed at the entrance to the second roadway.
 - An intersection where a special problem exists and where engineering judgment indicates the problem to be susceptible to correction by the use of the YIELD sign."
 
The sign went through several changes from its original design to the sign used today. Originally invented in 1950 and added to the MUTCD in 1954, the sign used the "keystone" shape before adopting the more readily recognized triangular shape. In 1971, the sign evolved into its modern version and changed from yellow to red, paralleling the same change that had earlier been made by STOP signs.
- Early design (1950–1954)
 - Second version (1954–1961)
 - Third version (1961–1971)
 - Modern design as agreed to in 1971
 
Other countries

- Most countries around the world use a red and white inverted triangle with no text.
 - Cuba, Finland, Greece, Iceland, Kuwait, Nigeria, Poland, Sweden and Vietnam use a red and yellow version of the sign.
 - United Kingdom, British Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies, Bhutan and most Commonwealth nations use a version of the sign that reads give way.
 - Dominica, Fiji, Liberia, New Zealand, and Samoa display text in red.
 - Singapore places the sign inside a white round square.
 - Belize, Brazil, Canada and Romania use a much thicker red border.
 - Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela use ceda el paso.
 - Puerto Rico uses a version of the American sign translated into Spanish which reads ceda.
 
Remove ads
Gallery
- International standard with white background[a]
 - International standard with yellow background[b]
 - Belize, Brazil, Canada, Romania
 - SACU standard[c]
 
Signs with text in English
- Anglophone Africa, Anglophone Caribbean (Lesser Antilles), India, Mauritius, Seychelles, United Kingdom
 - Australia, Guyana, Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu
 - Dominica
 - Fiji, New Zealand, Samoa
 - Ireland
 - Jamaica
 - Liberia
 - Nigeria
 - Singapore
 - Tonga
 - United States
 
Signs with text in Spanish
- Argentina
 - Central America
 - Colombia
 - Cuba
 - Ecuador
 - Mexico
 - Mexico (Jalisco)
 - Mexico (no longer used)
 - Panama
 - Peru
 - Puerto Rico
 - Spain[d]
 
Signs with text in other languages
- Brunei
 - China
 - France, Francophone Africa, Monaco
 - Haiti
 - Ireland (Gaeltacht)
 - Malaysia
 - Maldives
 - Taiwan
 - Thailand
 
Signs with bilingual text
- Bahrain
 - Canada (Ontario)
 - Egypt, Qatar, Yemen
 - France (Brittany)[16]
 - Hong Kong
 - Kuwait
 - Mauritania and Morocco
 - Philippines
 - South Korea
 - Tunisia
 - United Arab Emirates
 - Wales
 
Remove ads
See also
Notes
- Most countries around the world use this version.
 - Finland, Greece, Iceland, Kuwait, Poland, Sweden, Vietnam.
 - Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa. No longer used, the blue background has since been phased out in favour of white.
 - No longer used, the oldest ones use the French typeface Caractères instead of CCRIGE.
 
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads
