The "Idaho Stop" has been state policy there since 1982, with
Idaho Transportation Department Bicycle/Pedestrian Coordinator Mark McNeese saying in 2015 that "Idaho [bicycle collision] statistics confirm that the Idaho law has resulted in no discernible increase in injuries or fatalities to bicyclists." There was a resurgence of attempts to legalize stop-as-yield in other states in the 2000s. New Mexico attempted to enact an Idaho stop law in 2011; it made it through two senate committees, but failed in a close vote on the senate floor. After Oregon and San Francisco’s failed attempts to have similar bills passed, the Colorado cities of Dillon and Breckenridge passed stop-as-yield laws in 2011, the first localities in the country outside of Idaho. In 2012,
Summit County passed a similar law for its unincorporated areas and in 2014, the City of
Aspen passed one as well. In 2018, the state passed a law standardizing the language municipalities or counties could use to pass an Idaho Stop or stop-as-yield ordinance and preventing it from applying to any state highway system. In 2017, 35 years after Idaho, Delaware became the second U.S. state to pass an Idaho Stop law. Delaware's law - known as the "Delaware Yield" - makes stop-as-yield legal, but only applies on roads with one or two travel lanes. Bicyclists must come to a complete stop at stop sign-controlled intersections with multi-lane roads. In April 2019, Arkansas governor
Asa Hutchinson signed the Arkansas "Idaho stop" law. On August 6, 2019, Oregon Governor Kate Brown signed stop-as-yield into law with an effective date of January 1, 2020. Washington State legalized stop-as-yield in October 2020. On March 18, 2021, Utah Governor
Spencer Cox signed stop-as-yield into law for the state and on the next day, North Dakota Governor
Doug Burgum signed a similar law for that state. On May 10, 2021, Oklahoma Governor
Kevin Stitt signed House Bill 1770, which will allow bicyclists to treat stop signs as yield signs and stop lights as stop signs effective November 1, 2021. In April 2022, Colorado passed a law legalizing both stop-as-yield and red-as-stop statewide, overruling the previous patchwork of local laws. In December 2022, Washington, DC adopted the Safer Streets Amendment Act which allows bicyclists to yield at stop signs. The act also allows bicyclists to turn right at a red light after stopping, which was banned for drivers at the same time. An earlier version of the bill included a general red-light-as-stop provision but it was replaced with a provision that would allow red-light-as-stop” only at specific intersections with signage posted. In May 2023, Minnesota passed a law that allowed bicyclists to treat a stop sign as a yield sign. In March 2025, New Mexico passed Senate Bill 73, allowing cyclists to treat a stop sign as a yield sign and a red light as a stop sign. The law was signed by Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham on 21 March 2025, went into effect on 1 July 2025. Idaho stop style bills, or resolutions asking the state to pass one, have been introduced but not yet passed in Arizona, Montana, New York City, Santa Fe, Edmonton, New Jersey, Virginia, Texas, and Georgia. In California, an Idaho Stop bill was vetoed in 2021 due to the governor’s concerns that the law would confuse children; in 2022, the legislature withdrew a bill legalizing the Idaho Stop for adults after the governor indicated it would be vetoed again. Another bill passed the California Assembly in May 2023. ==Positions==