Parking rules trip up a surprising number of test-takers in Meath. The difference between a clearway and double yellow lines, how close you can park to a junction — these details matter on the theory test and on the road.
Meath is Ireland’s commuter heartland, with massive volumes of Dublin-bound traffic on the M3, N2, and M1 corridors. Navan, Ashbourne, and Dunshaughlin have experienced rapid growth, bringing suburban roundabouts and new road layouts. The county mixes fast dual carriageways with ancient, narrow rural roads. Rush-hour traffic, school zones, and construction areas are common driving challenges here.
Parking rules seem mundane but they’re responsible for a surprising number of failed questions. The theory test includes specific rules about where you can and cannot park that go beyond common sense.
Key rules: Don’t park within 5 metres of a junction. Don’t park on a clearway during restricted hours. Double yellow lines mean no parking at any time. Single yellow lines mean no parking during posted hours. Don’t park opposite a continuous white line if it would force other vehicles to cross it.
Study approach: Learn the distance rules (5m from junctions, 15m from bus stops) as specific numbers. Then practice with questions to reinforce them. Pay attention to the differences between stopping (briefly) and parking (leaving the vehicle).
Common trap: The difference between a clearway, double yellow lines, and a loading bay. Each has different restrictions and different time rules.
Q1.What does a single yellow line mean?
Q2.What is a clearway?
Q3.Where must you not park?
These are just a sample. L-Plate has all 40 parking questions with AI-powered explanations.
Single yellow: no parking during business hours
Double yellow: no parking at any time
Clearway: no stopping at all
Never park within 5m of a junction
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No parking allows brief stopping (loading/picking up). A clearway means no stopping whatsoever during the times shown.
You must not park within 5 metres of a junction.
Meath has one test centre in Navan with an approximate 8-week wait. Some Meath residents also use the Dublin centres.
Routes typically include N3 approach roundabouts, the town bypass, and residential estates.
The RSA question bank contains 40 parking 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 parking questions is 65%. Practising all 40 questions on L-Plate significantly improves your chances.