Pedestrian crossing questions test your knowledge of zebra, pelican, toucan, and puffin crossings. With 1,500 learner drivers in Longford, understanding your obligations at crossings keeps both drivers and pedestrians safe.
Longford is a quiet, rural county with a compact town centre. The N4 to Carrick-on-Shannon and N5 to Westport pass nearby. Roads are generally well-maintained but narrow, with limited overtaking opportunities. This is one of Ireland’s less congested counties — good for nervous learners but still requiring awareness of rural hazards like animals on roads and slow-moving farm vehicles.
Pedestrian crossing questions test your knowledge of the four types of crossing in Ireland and your obligations at each. Getting these right requires knowing the differences between them.
The four types: Zebra crossing (black and white stripes, no lights, pedestrians have right of way). Pelican crossing (push-button controlled, has a flashing amber phase). Puffin crossing (sensors detect pedestrians, no flashing amber). Toucan crossing (shared by cyclists and pedestrians, wider than standard crossings).
Study approach: Make a comparison table of all four crossing types with their features and your obligations. The questions will test whether you can distinguish between them and know the rules for each specific type.
Common trap: The difference between pelican (flashing amber phase) and puffin (no flashing amber — sensors hold the red until pedestrians clear). This distinction appears in multiple questions.
Q1.What should you do when approaching a zebra crossing?
Q2.What is a pelican crossing?
Q3.What is a toucan crossing?
These are just a sample. L-Plate has all 30 pedestrian crossing questions with AI-powered explanations.
Zebra: pedestrians have right of way when on the crossing
Pelican: pedestrian-operated traffic lights
Toucan: shared crossing for pedestrians and cyclists
Puffin: pedestrian user-friendly intelligent crossing
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A zebra crossing has black and white stripes and pedestrians have priority. A pelican crossing has traffic lights operated by pedestrians.
Yes, if a pedestrian is at or approaching the crossing with the intention to cross, you must stop.
Longford has one test centre in the town with an approximate 6-week wait.
Yes, Longford has a relatively short 6-week wait and a compact, manageable town for the test.
The RSA question bank contains 30 pedestrian crossing questions. On any given test, you’ll typically see 3–12 questions from this category depending on the random selection.
The national average pass rate for pedestrian crossing questions is 82%. Practising all 30 questions on L-Plate significantly improves your chances.