- To avoid a merging mishap, ease off the accelerator and cars should naturally flow in front of each other, one by one like a zipper.
When behind the wheel, few things can cause frustration as easily as poor merging and impolite lane etiquette.
Research conducted by Insurance Australia Group (IAG) found more than half (54 per cent) of Australian drivers admitted to having trouble merging with traffic and that 83 per cent of us claim to have experienced other drivers' poor merging technique. Merging lanes are a necessity, and all road users have to deal with them at some point, so let's take a look at the do's and don'ts of merging.
Do's
- When merging into another lane, you must give way to anyone that's in the lane you're moving into and it's important that you indicate for a reasonable amount of time to warn other people that you intend to cross into their lane.
- They might look similar, but a lane change and a zip merge are different. If you have to cross a white line (i.e a lane change), give way to all traffic in the lane you're about to enter. If the white line ends before the lanes merge (i.e a zip merge), give way to any car that's in front of you.
- If you're about to enter a freeway, wait for a safe gap. Already on the freeway? Help out other drivers by giving them space to enter if it's safe.
- Be sure to match the legal speed of the road you're merging into. Strolling onto a 100 km/h freeway doing 40 km/h isn't just dangerous for you, but it's dangerous for those travelling on the freeway too.
- Always check your mirrors and blind spots before merging.