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Flashing Your Headlights? You’re Probably Sending the Wrong Signals

Using headlights to communicate with other drivers is a practice that can vary by region and might not always send the intended signal, experts say.Credit...Getty Images

You’re driving on a winding, rural road at night and a car in the opposite lane has its high beams on.

Do you:

A. Flash your headlights to alert the driver?

B. Momentarily look down and to the right at the white line on the road to avoid being blinded?

C. Turn on your high beams?

(For purposes of this quiz, we’ll rule out swearing as an option.)

If you answered B, go to the head of driver’s ed class. If you answered A or C, think again.

Drivers once commonly flashed their headlights at oncoming cars that had their high beams on. But according to William E. Van Tassel, the manager of driver training programs at AAA’s headquarters in Heathrow, Fla., “We really have gotten away from that.”

The driver with the blinding high beams might be impaired by alcohol. Flashing your own high beams, particularly at night, could make that person’s vision, possibly already diminished by drinking and darkness, even worse, Mr. Van Tassel said.

He also advised against flashing your lights because of the dangers of the so-called moth effect, which occurs when drivers are mesmerized by bright or flashing lights and head in the direction they are looking. Flashing your lights could also be interpreted as an act of aggression.

His advice?

“Let them go on by,” he said.

Laws about using headlights to communicate — if they exist at all — can vary from state to state, said Brett Robinson, the executive director of the American Driver and Traffic Safety Education Association in Indiana, Pa.

As for how some of these practices became part of driving folklore, it’s a case of “your father did it, and his father did it,” he said.

Mr. Robinson recommended against using headlights to communicate, emphasizing that no universally accepted, consistent standards exist. “It means something different to everybody,” he said.

To add to the confusion, “lots of different regional norms” exist, said Staff Sgt. Terence J. McDonnell of the Traffic Services Section of the New York State Police. A commonly accepted signal in one part of the country might mean something entirely different somewhere else.

Sometimes drivers at a four-way stop flash their lights to signal others to go ahead. That leaves room for miscommunication, Mr. Robinson said, especially if a driver intends the signal to mean that others should stay put.

Robert K. Gillmer, the president of the Driving School Association of the Americas in North Wales, Pa., near Philadelphia, said that if the other person is slow to respond to the signal, the one yielding might then decide to go.

“If that person doesn’t react fast enough, they could change their mind,” Mr. Gillmer said. “To play it 1,000 percent safe,” he recommended against using headlights to signal other drivers. “By you doing no action, it’s better that you don’t have somebody misinterpret what you are saying,” he said.

In other cases, drivers might use their lights to indicate that it’s safe to pull into traffic or make a turn.

“Flashing your head beams to say ‘It’s O.K. to come out’” when the other driver cannot see oncoming traffic is fairly common, Sergeant McDonnell said. But he cautioned drivers to do so at their own peril, “because you are putting your safety in the hands of that other driver’s courtesy.”

Experts advised against using headlights to warn drivers about a speed trap.

Mr. Van Tassel said that AAA does not encourage that kind of behavior and that motorists should drive within the speed limit. He noted that the effects of a crash at 65 miles per hour are much worse than one at 55 m.p.h.

Some suggested that using headlights in this way could be interpreted by the authorities as obstructing governmental administration, though Sergeant McDonnell said he didn’t know if he would go that far.

As for drivers who flash their lights to get you to move over because you’re not going fast enough, Mr. Van Tassel said not to take it personally.

“Just get out of the way,” he said.

A “universal courtesy across the country on interstates” is to flash your lights to signal to truck drivers that it’s clear for them to switch lanes, Sergeant McDonnell said. The truckers will often thank you by briefly turning on their hazards, he said.

Experts recommended using your headlights to signal drivers to slow down because of a hazard ahead — a crash, some kind of wildlife, debris on the road or a disabled vehicle.

At night in those cases, it’s better to switch from low beams to off instead of low to high, Mr. Van Tassel said.

“This way you’re less likely to blind an oncoming driver with brighter lights, but still get a very obvious signal to them that something is going on directly ahead of them, and that they should approach with an abundance of caution,” he said.

Experts recommend keeping your headlights on low — even during the day — to improve your visibility to other drivers.

What about those urban legends about headlights and gang initiation rituals?

The stories vary slightly: One version purports that if you flash your lights at a car without its lights on, you are targeted for violence. The other version suggests that drivers flash their headlights to get you to pull over and that when you do, you are killed as part of a gang’s initiation.

Snopes.com, the myth-debunking website, has repeatedly found those stories to be false.

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