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Highway Code · Rule 5

Highway Code Rule 5

Rules for pedestrians (1 to 35). Advisory guidance you are expected to follow.

  • Rules for pedestrians
  • Advisory rule
  • OGL v3.0

What the rule says

Advisory

Rule 5 (General guidance (rules 1 to 6)) Organised walks or parades involving large groups of people walking along a road should use a pavement if available; if one is not available, they should keep to the left. Look-outs should be positioned at the front and back of the group, and they should wear fluorescent clothes in daylight and reflective clothes in the dark. At night, the look-out in front should show a white light and the one at the back a red light. People on the outside of large groups should also carry lights and wear reflective clothing.

Rule text reproduced verbatim from the official Highway Code (Crown copyright) under the Open Government Licence v3.0, see the attribution at the foot of this page.

In plain English

Stripped of the formal wording, Rule 5 comes down to one idea: rule 5 (General guidance (rules 1 to 6)) Organised walks or parades involving large groups of people walking along a road should use a pavement if available; if one is not available, they should keep… It is advice rather than law, but examiners and the courts still treat it as the expected standard of safe driving.

It belongs to the rules for pedestrians part of the Code, the habits a confident, considerate driver builds until they are automatic. The aim is not to memorise the sentence word for word, but to understand the hazard it protects you from, so you apply it without having to think when it counts.

If you are learning, treat this rule as one piece of a connected set rather than an isolated fact. The related rules below sit in the same section and reinforce each other, reading them together is how the rules for pedestrians part of the Code starts to feel like common sense rather than a list to revise.

Because this is advisory rather than legal, no one will fine you for the rule alone, but ignoring it can still count against you in a careless-driving case, and it will cost you faults on the test. Either way, the safe move is to build the habit early, while a driving instructor can correct it, rather than relearning it under test pressure. That is exactly what the practice routes and coaching in the DriveRoutes app are designed to help with, turning the rules below into the way you naturally drive.

Why rule 5 matters on the road

Pedestrians, cyclists, motorcyclists and horse riders have little protection in a collision, so a moment of inattention from a driver can cause serious harm. Anticipating and giving them room is one of the clearest signs of a safe, considerate driver.

Common faults examiners record

In the rules for pedestrians part of the Code, the faults most often written on the marking sheet tend to be the same handful. Knowing them in advance is the quickest way to drive them out of your own habits:

  • Passing cyclists or horses too closely or too fast.
  • Failing to anticipate a pedestrian stepping out near a crossing or parked cars.
  • Not giving way at a crossing when someone is clearly waiting.

On the day

Imagine approaching a cyclist on a narrow stretch during the drive. Applying Rule 5 means easing off early, holding back until you can see it is genuinely safe, then passing wide and slow before returning to your line. The examiner is watching for exactly that anticipation, not a squeeze past at speed.

Quick checklist

  • Scan ahead for pedestrians, cyclists and riders well before you reach them.
  • Give them room and time, pass wide and slow.
  • Be ready to stop at crossings and side roads.

More from Rules for pedestrians

Related Highway Code rules

Rule 5, your questions

Rule 5 (General guidance (rules 1 to 6)) Organised walks or parades involving large groups of people walking along a road should use a pavement if available; if one is not available, they should keep… It is advisory guidance rather than law, but you are still expected to follow it and an examiner can mark a fault if you do not.

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