What is the maximum speed limit on urban roads?
1 Answers
For roads without a central dividing line, the maximum speed limit on urban roads is 30 km/h, while on highways it is 40 km/h. For roads with only one motor vehicle lane in the same direction, the maximum speed limit on urban roads is 50 km/h, and on highways it is 70 km/h. Speed must not exceed 30 km/h under the following circumstances: When entering or exiting non-motorized vehicle lanes, passing through railway crossings, sharp curves, narrow roads, or narrow bridges; when making U-turns, turning, or descending steep slopes; when encountering fog, rain, snow, dust, or hail with visibility less than 50 meters; when driving on icy or muddy roads; and when towing a malfunctioning motor vehicle. Speed limit regulations: Motor vehicles must not exceed the speed indicated by speed limit signs or markings on the road. For roads with two or more motor vehicle lanes in the same direction without speed limit signs or markings, the maximum speed limit on urban roads is 70 km/h, while on enclosed motor vehicle-only roads and highways, it is 80 km/h. Special speed limit conditions: Tunnels and tunnel groups generally have a speed limit of 80 km/h. Accident-prone sections typically have a speed limit 20 km/h lower than the main highway speed limit. Sharp curves and interchange ramps are speed-limited according to their design speed. ETC lanes have a speed limit of 20 km/h, and truck weigh-in-motion lanes have a speed limit of 5 km/h.