Rules of the Road is the largest category on the theory test, and Meath’s 7,800 learner drivers need to know every rule. From roundabout priority to overtaking rules, these questions test the fundamentals every driver in Meath must understand.
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.
Rules of the Road is the largest category and covers everything from roundabout procedure to overtaking rules. It’s also the most “common sense” category — many questions can be answered by thinking about what a safe, considerate driver would do.
Study approach: Focus on the rules that have specific numbers attached: stopping distances, clearance distances, lane rules. The “why” behind each rule helps you remember it. Don’t just memorise “don’t cross a continuous white line” — understand that it marks areas where overtaking is dangerous due to limited visibility.
Common trap: Roundabout priority and lane positioning are the most-failed topics in this category. Practice these specifically with focused question sets.
Q1.Who has right of way at an unmarked crossroads?
Q2.What is the speed limit in built-up areas?
Q3.When can you overtake on the left?
These are just a sample. L-Plate has all 300 rules of the road questions with AI-powered explanations.
Nobody has automatic right of way at unmarked crossroads
Default speed limit in towns is 50 km/h
Traffic on a roundabout has right of way
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Roundabout right of way, speed limits, overtaking rules, and traffic light sequences are the most frequent.
They are the most heavily tested category with about 300 questions in the bank. Many have tricky wording.
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 300 rules of the road 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 rules of the road questions is 68%. Practising all 300 questions on L-Plate significantly improves your chances.