Participation in the Vienna Convention on Road Traffic
Signed and ratified
Acceded or succeeded
Signatory only
Signed
8 November 1968
Location
Vienna
Effective
21 May 1977
Signatories
36
Parties
86[1]
Albania
Armenia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Bahamas
Bahrain
Belarus
Belgium
Benin
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Brazil
Bulgaria
Cabo Verde
Central African Republic
Côte d'Ivoire
Croatia
Cuba
Czech Republic
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Denmark
Egypt
Estonia
Ethiopia
Finland
France
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Guyana
Honduras
Hungary
Iran
Iraq
Israel
Italy
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Liberia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Moldova
Monaco
Mongolia
Montenegro
Morocco
Myanmar
Netherlands
Niger
Nigeria
North Macedonia
Norway
Oman
Pakistan
Palestine
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Qatar
Romania
Russia
San Marino
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Serbia
Seychelles
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Uganda
Ukraine
United Kingdom
Uruguay
Uzbekistan
Vietnam
Zimbabwe
Depositary
UN Secretary-General
Languages
English, French, Chinese, Russian and Spanish
Full text
Vienna Convention on Road Traffic at Wikisource
The Convention on Road Traffic, commonly known as the Vienna Convention on Road Traffic, is an international treaty designed to facilitate international road traffic and to increase road safety by establishing standard traffic rules among the contracting parties. The convention was agreed upon at the United Nations Economic and Social Council's Conference on Road Traffic (7 October – 8 November 1968) and concluded in Vienna on 8 November 1968. This conference also produced the Convention on Road Signs and Signals. The convention had amendments on 3 September 1993 and 28 March 2006. There is a European Agreement supplementing the Convention on Road Traffic (1968), which was concluded in Geneva on 1 May 1971.
^"Status of 19. Convention on Road Traffic". United Nations. Retrieved 2020-05-23.
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ratified the ViennaConventiononRoad Signs and Signals. The first edition of the MUTCD was published in 1935, 33 years before the ViennaConvention was signed...
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system is stipulated in Article 18.4.a of the ViennaConventiononRoadTraffic for countries where traffic keeps to the right and applies to all situations...
signatory to the ViennaConventiononRoadTraffic and the ViennaConventiononRoad Signs and Signals. Belarus signed the ViennaConventionon 8 November 1968...
basic traffic rules are defined by an international treaty under the authority of the United Nations, the 1968 ViennaConventiononRoadTraffic. Not all...
as 'Duurzaam Veilig' road design was rolled out across the Netherlands. In countries bounded by ViennaConventiononRoadTraffic, article 11 states that:...
France signed the ViennaConventiononRoad Signs and Signals on 8 November 1968 and ratified it on 9 December 1971. These road signs can also be found...
English as required by the ViennaConventiononRoadTraffic, conveys its meaning through the depiction of a raised hand. Israeli road sign regulations provide...
icons are governed by the ViennaConventiononRoadTraffic and ViennaConventiononRoad Signs and Signals. Inscriptions onroad signs in Georgia are usually...
participants of traffic built-in graphic icons. These icons are governed by the ViennaConventiononRoadTraffic and ViennaConventiononRoad Signs and Signals...
participants of traffic built-in graphic icons. They generally conform to the ViennaConventiononRoadTraffic and ViennaConventiononRoad Signs and Signals...
Indonesian (klakson), and Korean (클랙슨). In countries applying the ViennaConventiononRoadTraffic, usage of audible warnings is limited, and allowed only in...
standardisation. Most European countries refer to the 1968 ViennaConventiononRoad Signs and Signals. The convention has been adopted by the following countries (including...