Traffic light questions are one of the easier categories, but don’t skip them. Waterford’s drivers encounter traffic lights daily, and the theory test includes tricky questions about flashing amber lights, filter arrows, and the correct sequence.
Waterford City sits on the River Suir with bridge crossings forming key traffic points. The city’s quay roads carry heavy traffic, and the new bypass has complex junction designs. The coastal road through Dunmore East and Tramore involves steep gradients and sharp bends. Inland areas have quiet country roads where right-of-way at unmarked crossroads is a common theory test topic.
Traffic light questions are one of the easier categories, but don’t skip them. A few specific questions about light sequences and less common signals catch people out.
Key knowledge: The sequence is green → amber → red → red+amber → green. Flashing amber means proceed with caution (commonly at pelican crossings after the red phase). A green arrow filter allows movement in that direction only. You must stop on amber unless it’s unsafe to do so (you’re too close to the line).
Study approach: This is a quick category to master. Learn the light sequence, understand filter arrows and flashing ambers, and you’re most of the way there. A single focused practice session should be sufficient.
Common trap: What to do at a flashing amber light. Many people treat it like green, but the correct answer is to proceed only if the way is clear — pedestrians may still be crossing.
Q1.What does a flashing amber light mean?
Q2.What does a green arrow filter signal mean?
Q3.What sequence do traffic lights follow?
These are just a sample. L-Plate has all 35 traffic lights questions with AI-powered explanations.
Sequence: red, red+amber, green, amber, red
Flashing amber: proceed with caution
Green arrow: you may go in that direction only
Red light: stop behind the stop line
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Proceed with caution. You may go, but must give way to pedestrians and other traffic.
Red, red and amber together, green, amber, red.
Waterford has one RSA test centre in the city with an approximate 10-week wait.
Currently approximately 10 weeks, which is shorter than most larger centres.
The RSA question bank contains 35 traffic lights 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 traffic lights questions is 80%. Practising all 35 questions on L-Plate significantly improves your chances.