with
Sumburgh Airport's runway in
Shetland. The movable barrier closes when an aircraft lands or takes off. A set of lights, known as a signal head, may have one, two, three, or more aspects. The most common signal type has three aspects facing the oncoming traffic: red on top, amber ("yellow" in North America, "orange" in Australia) below, and green below that. Additional aspects may be fitted to the signal, usually to indicate specific restrictions or filter movements.
Meanings of signals The
1968 Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals Chapter III provides international standards for the setup of traffic signal operations. Not all states have ratified the convention. A three-colour signal head should have three non-flashing red,
amber, and green lights. They should be arranged either vertically, with red on top, or horizontally, with red opposite the traffic flow. A two-colour signal head may be used in temporary operation and consists of red and green non-flashing lights. In both cases, all lights should be circular or arrow-shaped.
Green arrows Arrow aspects may be used to permit certain movements or convey other messages to road users. A green arrow may display to require drivers to turn in a particular direction only or to allow drivers to continue in a particular direction when the signal is red. A third type is known as a "doghouse" or "cluster head" – a vertical column with the two normal lights is on the right side of the signal, a vertical column with the two arrows is located on the left, and the normal red signal is in the middle above the two columns. Cluster signals in Australia and
New Zealand use six signals, the sixth being a red arrow that can operate separately from the standard red light. In a fourth type, sometimes seen at intersections in
Ontario and
Quebec, Canada, there is no dedicated left-turn lamp per se. Instead, the normal green lamp flashes rapidly, indicating permission to go straight as well as make a left turn in front of opposing traffic, which is being held by a steady red lamp. This "advance green", or flashing green, can be somewhat startling and confusing to drivers not familiar with this system. This can confuse visitors to British Columbia, where a flashing green signal denotes a pedestrian-controlled crosswalk. For this reason, Ontario is phasing out the use of flashing green signals and instead replacing them with arrows.
Countdown lights Popular in Vietnam and China, countdown lights are additional lights installed adjacent to or within the main signal lights. The countdown light is displayed by a countdown number with different colours, usually red, yellow, and green, matching the colour of the light on. When the light counts to "0" (or 1), the main light colour immediately changes. Countdown lights may have zeros in the tens place or none; some may flash when getting ready to zero. Yellow lights can have countdown lights, but the most lights do not. Usually the countdown light has 2 digits, in case the time of the main light (usually the red light, rarely the green light) is longer than 100 seconds, depending on the type of light, the following possibilities may occur: • The lights have not counted down, when 99 seconds are left, start counting. During standby, the light may display "99", "00", "--", or be off. • The last two digits count light of the timeout (the counter light is 15 while the time is 115 seconds, some types of lights count as "-9" or "9-" when the time is 109 seconds) • The tens digit on the display becomes a letter. Displaying A0 for 100 seconds, B0 for 110 seconds, so forth. • Display of only the last two digits, with a flashing indicator to show it is more than 100. Countdown lights are also used for both vehicular and pedestrian signals in the
Philippines. However, since 2025, the use of countdown timers has been phased out in
Metro Manila by the
Metropolitan Manila Development Authority in favor of a volume-based traffic signalling system. As a result, instead of a countdown timer to the next phase, green signals will blink five times before turning yellow.
Issue about the yellow light dilemma zone in South Korea In South Korea, the yellow (amber) light dilemma zone is not legally recognised. In other words, when the amber light is on, traffic may not pass the stop line or enter the intersection, even if the traffic cannot safely stop when the light shows. In May 2024, this was reaffirmed by the
Supreme Court of Korea, for a case where the driver was speeding at 62 km/h in a street limited up to 40 km/h, % higher than the allowed speed. Critics in South Korea say this is unrealistic and unreasonable. This can cause multiple collisions due to sudden braking. In 2016, when the speed limit was up to 60 km/h, proposed alternatives to this type of collision included only roundabouts, increased speed compliance, and reduced-speed practice; elderly zones were also proposed as solutions.
Yellow trap Without an all-red phase, cross-turning traffic may be caught in a '
yellow trap'. When the signal turns yellow (amber), a turning driver may assume oncoming traffic will stop, and a crash may result. For this reason, the US bans sequences that may cause a yellow trap. This can also happen when emergency vehicles or railroads preempt normal signal operation. In the United States, signs reading "Oncoming traffic has extended green" or "Oncoming traffic may have extended green" must be posted at intersections where the "yellow trap" condition exists.
Variations The United States is not party to the
Vienna Convention; rather, the
Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) outlines correct operation in that country. In the US, a single signal head may have three, four, or five aspects. A single-aspect green arrow may be displayed to indicate continuous movement. The signals must be arranged in red, amber, and green, either vertically (top to bottom) or horizontally (left to right). In the US, a single-aspect flashing amber signal can be used to raise attention to a warning sign, and a single-aspect flashing red signal can be used to raise attention to a "stop", "do not enter", or "wrong way" sign. The MUTCD specifies the following vehicular signals: Japanese traffic signals mostly follow the same rule except that the green "go" signals are referred to as 青 (ao), typically translated as "blue", reflecting
a historical change in the Japanese language. As a result, Japanese officials decreed in 1973 that the "go" light should be changed to the bluest possible shade of green, bringing the name more in line with the colour without violating the international "green means go" rule. In the UK, normal traffic lights follow this sequence: • Red – Stop, do not proceed. • Red and amber – Get ready to proceed, but do not proceed yet. • Green – Proceed if the intersection or crossing is clear; vehicles are not allowed to block the intersection or crossing. • Amber – Stop, unless it is unsafe to do so. A speed sign is a special traffic light, variable
traffic sign, or
variable-message sign giving drivers a recommended speed to approach the next traffic light in its green phase and avoid a stop due to reaching the intersection when lights are red. ==Pedestrian signals==