By Jack Luke

Published: Thursday, 14 October 2021 at 12:00 am


There’s a lot of confusion surrounding the law for bike lights in the UK: Is a flashing light legal or does it have to be steady? And do you have to fit reflectors, too? Here, we set the facts straight.

It’s worth explaining why you need to fit and use lights at night in the first place, and it’s not just to see where you’re going – if you’re riding on city streets, the street lights probably do that for you fairly well. Equally important is that bike lights and reflectors help us to be seen by other road users and pedestrians.

If you’re looking for advice on which bike lights to buy, check out our guides to the best bike lights for road cycling and best mountain bike lights.

The current UK law on bike lights

"Bike
It is a legal requirement to have a front and rear light, as well as a red rear reflector, fitted to your bike if riding at night.
James Huang / Immediate Media

According to the UK’s Road Vehicles Lighting Regulations (RVLR), it’s illegal to cycle on a public road between sunset and sunrise without lights.

There have been quite a few changes to this legislation in recent years – the current version of the RVLR was published in 1989, and has since been amended multiple times, most recently in 2017.

To avoid trouble with the law (and, arguably more importantly, to stay safe), a white light must be showing from the front of your bike and a red light from the rear.

The RVLR specifies minimum outputs for these lights and also requires that complete bikes must be sold with reflectors on the front and rear of the bike, as well as both the front and rear of each pedal.

To be totally clear, it is not a requirement to ride with a white front reflector fitted to your bike but it must have a red rear reflector fitted. Complete bikes must be sold with them fitted. In any case, it’s a good idea to leave both of them on.

Note that, to stay on the right side of the law, the lights must also be fitted to your bike and not your helmet. The law explicitly states they should be mounted to your bike and they cannot be higher than 1,500mm from the ground in any case.

If you lack any of these things and are involved in a nighttime crash, then it could be regarded as ‘contributory negligence’, which is a fancy way of saying the law could potentially deem the incident partially your fault.

But, in practice, you’re unlikely to be pulled over by the police as long as the front and rear of your bike is illuminated.

This is backed up by Rule 60 of the Highway Code, which says:

“At night your cycle MUST have white front and red rear lights lit. It MUST also be fitted with a red rear reflector (and amber pedal reflectors, if manufactured after 1/10/85). White front reflectors and spoke reflectors will also help you to be seen. Flashing lights are permitted but it is recommended that cyclists who are riding in areas without street lighting use a steady front lamp.”

The minimum legally required equipment for riding a bike at night in the UK

  • A front lamp showing a white light, positioned up to 150cm from the ground and facing forwards. If capable of emitting only a flashing light, it must emit at least four candela (a unit of light intensity, comfortably exceeded by modern lights). If capable of emitting a steady light, the light must comply to BS6102/3 standards
  • A rear lamp showing a red light, positioned between 35cm and 150cm from the ground, facing rearwards. If capable of emitting only a flashing light, it must emit at least four candela. If capable of emitting a steady light, it must comply to BS3648, or BS6102/3 standards
  • Rear reflector, coloured red, positioned between 25cm and 90cm from the ground, facing rearwards
  • Pedal reflectors, coloured amber, positioned so that one is plainly visible to the front and another to the rear of each pedal