Driving in Cambodia
What do you think of the way people drive in Cambodia? How different is it from your home country?
Respecting the road safety rules, driving etiquette such as general courtesy, speed excessÂ… what are the characteristics of the driving style in Cambodia?
Share with us the difficulties one may face when driving in Cambodia: peak hours, road conditions, accident, etc. and your advice to drive safely in the country.
Thank you in advance for participating,
Maximilien
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Busy traffic times are Mornings, Lunch time and especially about 5 to 6 pm. Be sure to drive slow and take it easy while driving cause there's a lot you got to look out for such as:
-sewer holes in the road;
-pot holes;
-sand or debris on the road
-crazy drivers coming at you from every direction
-drunk drivers Motors, cars, trucks, semi trucks. (everybody)
If you go out and drink at night be careful because from 10 to 2 am is when a lot of people are drunk and driving home. After that it dies down, I advice to stay away from St. 272 where Cambodia beer is. It is wild at night there.Â
Try to get to know the roads and pick the safest route for you.
For those driving SUV , they are kind of impolite. streets are small with crowded tuktuk and they come zooming in.
I guess, its drivers in a wrong time in a wrong place. lol
A: A lot different and crazy. Like everyone says, they don't obey the laws and police. Even though there is a law, government don't let people teach the law. It means that they don't need the law.
Q: Respecting the road safety rules, driving etiquette such as general courtesy, speed excess… what are the characteristics of the driving style in Cambodia?
A: They don't follow the traffic lights.... lines on the load..everything. the Lines are just display.
There are law but those law are just useless like you mention above.
Q: Share with us the difficulties one may face when driving in Cambodia: peak hours, road conditions, accident, etc. and your advice to drive safely in the country.
A: Keep eyes open very big always and try to protect yourself first.
Don't try to fight with local people. Even though we do right way, they are not our side.
Install the camera in your car and join the insurance in case of accident.
I complained the matters to Cambodian friends, and they say Cambodian people also know their problem but they have never tried to fix it until somebody does it first. They are afraid of being sacrificed themselves.
One thing that does no good at all is judging the way people drive in Cambodia. I know a guy who got into 5 accidents in 3 months because he couldn't adapt to their driving style and got angry every time he saw a Cambodian doing something "wrong." Anything can happen, so expect anything. You need to keep a cool head and drive defensively. I haven't had an accident in 9 years, so I must be doing something right.
Driving in Khmerland is good and exciting, especially if you have mutated and developed a second or third set of eyes to use. Scary as all get out.... but fun.
Ya gotta love this place!Lack of laws. Polices are corrupt and only interested in making money. They don't enforce the laws. You will see them at most major traffic lights trying to catch drivers going through red lights or motoris without a helmet. For this reason people are not afraid of the laws and don't abide by the road rules. There are no speed or red light cameras.
Nobody gives way , nobody cares! It is very dangerous , if you are in cambodia for the first time , my suggestion would be not to drive yet. Wait and see. Get use to the roads and traffics first. There are many death on the road . It is an awful scene to witness and leaves night mares if you are not use to seeing this. You can book an airconditioned metered taxi for about the same price as a tuk tuk nowaday abd that will get you pretty much anywhere. The other option is a motor dup.
I've been here for 9 years and had my share of mishaps on the roads in Cambo'. I've driven in some crazy places around the world but here we have to be careful on foot just as much as driving.
I agree with all posts.... all I can add is, "don't drive unless you really have to!" Peter.
On the rare occasion that one actually halts at a traffic light, make sure you are in the right hand lane when turning left. As the lights turn green, cut in front of the other lanes, clip the left hand curb and then continue with the weaving process as above.
Traffic lights are pretty colours but, apart from that, may be ignored.
A moto is built to carry 2 people, but this is just a guideline. A small child can happily stand in front of the driver, clutching the handlebars. Mother, sitting sidesaddle behind the driver and carrying the week;s shopping, can easily hold a baby while 2 other children straddle before and after her.Â
It is now compulsory for moto drivers to wear helmets. though he only needs to do so when approaching the traffic cops on Friday evenings as they gather on corners to collect their weekly wages from the drivers. It's 3000 reil for locals and a small fortune for foreigners. Occasionally they will stop car drivers and demand around $10 for not wearing an helmet?!! Moto passengers are not required to wear helmets because, presumably, they are able to bounce along the road unharmed.
Good luck with your driving experience. Personally, I'd rather stick to hired motos and tuc-tucs.
I've witnessed fatalities and have been involved in one. Two young drunken Cambodian lads clipped my handlebar, knocked me sideways and they tumbled down a very bad pot holed road for about 75 meters wearing only t-shirts, shorts and flip flops.
The police arrived and two ambulances. By the time they arrived, a Cambodian householder came to me and told me to bring myself and moto into his house until the police had gone because he and others had seen that it wasn't my fault but I would surely get the blame being a barang.
I was lucky, just shaken up; the guy who helped me was a saint. - especially him being Cambodian -I feel sorry for the two young lads as I don't fancy their chances of survival.
This was a few years ago; since then, I've known about and seen a few deaths on the road and some horrendous accidents including a bikers leg being swept off the road in bits!
So, some of us have to drive obviously; if you do, always wear a helmet, don't assume anything, go slow and always have a couple of dollars in Riel in a traffic cop pocket.on you. And don't drive under the influence of anything, not aything!
Sad, but my driving days here are over; anything can happen and eventually does. Be careful.
Wear a full-face helmet and closed toed shoes so you can let one foot slide along the ground at low speed when the moto is unstable; avoid rush hour traffic from 4pm-6pm; avoid driving on wet roads; go thru intersections at bicycle speed; watch out for reckless, over-confident young Khmer drivers; stay to the right unless traffic is using the right shoulder to come at you from the opposite direction; carry a copy of your passport and moto registration, not the original; carry some cash for the service fee if you are stopped by the police; carry a spare moto key in your pocket in case the police take your keys; if you drop the moto take your right hand off the throttle right away and turn off the engine; drive as if your life depended on it; ask Buddha for guidance and protection at least once a day.
The Global status report on road safety 2013 estimates that more than 2400 people are killed in road traffic crashes in Cambodia every year. Motorcyclists make up 70% of all these. Pedestrians are the second most vulnerable group, representing 12% of all road fatalities.
So also take care when youre walking....
What's the worst country in this region, in your experience, traffic-wise?
Most of the Cambodians know that if you are in an accident ,chances are you will get the blame even if it`s not your fault,so some of them take great delight in playing "chicken" with westerners.
I don't know what test the car drivers go through to get a license,but dear oh dear. Its either complete incompetence or plain arrogance.Maybe a bit of both. Let`s face it Asians cant drive.
It`s every man or woman for themselves out there.
be safe!
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