Judging from numerous comments online, the expatriate community in general are highly critical of Portuguese drivers (some have a tendency to be critical of most things in Portugal). I am sure most of you have read the ever recurring criticisms, “they don’t use their indicators, overtake recklessly” etc. We have all seen these things happen, but it’s not just in Portugal.
I drive a lot, and occasionally see some dangerous overtaking, lack of signalling, but it’s no worse than most other countries I have driven in. There is always a percentage of ‘idiot’ drivers, but that not unique to Portugal.
There is a possibly valid argument that some drivers are impatient. Stuck in single line traffic on secondary roads, their impatience can get the better of them and lead to unwise overtaking. This point is easily proved by observing driving on the motorways. The dual carriageways allow drivers to overtake at will, and personally, and I do stress personally, I very rarely see bad driving on these roads.
On secondary roads, such as the EN125 in the Algarve, the road authorities have implemented flexible posts along the middle of the road to prevent overtaking in dangerous places. Not everyone likes these but they do a very good job. More roundabouts have been constructed to slow traffic down and make turning off the road much safer.
The bigger the motorbike, the safer the driver
It’s also interesting to note that in the past, regarding motorcycles, the worst offenders were the underpowered bikes that wanted to be ‘big bikers’. Now that larger and more powerful motorbikes are available, standards seem to have improved quite dramatically. Those with the big powerful bikes have nothing to prove. The general rule seems to be, the bigger the bike, the more sensible the driver. And vice versa! Not always but usually.
Interestingly, Greece had the highest share of motorcyclist’s road fatalities in 2020.
What are the statistical facts
Portugal is nowhere near the top of the list of the worst European countries for road deaths per capita, and in the last ten years has reduced road deaths by 20.9 percent. Spain (22.7 percent) and France (21.7 percent) have made even better progress in the last ten years. The safest countries to drive in are the Scandinavian countries, no surprise there, and the UK.
Out of the 32 countries monitored by the ETSC Road Safety Performance Index (PIN) programme, 16 countries reduced road deaths in 2018. The best results were achieved by Slovakia with a 17 percent decrease, Israel with 13 percent, Slovenia with 12 percent, Lithuania with 11 percent and Bulgaria with 10 percent. Road deaths increased in ten countries, while progress stagnated in six. Portugal was not in either of those last categories.
In terms of road accident as opposed to road deaths, Portugal sits in the middle. The worst country for road accidents is Bulgaria, and the lowest is Sweden.
Look for yourself
In the last few days, I have been carefully observing the traffic around me as I drive the EN125. I haven’t been ‘tailgated’ nor have I seen anyone being ‘tailgated’. Yes, I know it happens, but these days it’s quite rare. No doubt I will get extensive responses telling me of their personal observations, but I challenge you to look around, and be honest with yourself, driving has improved. Most drivers use their indicators, I didn’t see any crazy overtaking.
This won’t be a particularly popular point of view with a certain group of people who tend to be critical. I simply challenge you to look around, and perhaps you will see that driving has improved. Whichever country you are driving in, you will see you fair share of bad or irresponsible drivers, it’s not restricted to Portugal. Mobile phones do continue to be quite a problem, but that’s everywhere. Long distance lorry drivers in the UK are constantly causing accidents while using their mobiles, sometimes even texting. The GNR are doing their best to control this, but it’s a real challenge as it’s easy to hide your phone when you see the police. Be honest, have you never used your mobile in the car?
Driving has improved
In Lagoa there are two pedestrian crossings that I use quite a lot. 99 percent of drivers stop to allow you to cross. The only recent exception was a woman talking on her mobile. We love our mobiles, but they are a menace in the car unless they are totally hands free.
Otherwise, I believe we need to ditch our preconceived ideas about drivers in Portugal and accept things have improved. You only have to look to see! I fully expect to be bombarded with people giving examples of bad driving they have experienced. Was it recent? Can we actually accept that the standard of driving in Portugal has improved, the statistics prove it. You may not trust statistics but look around you.
Resident in Portugal for 50 years, publishing and writing about Portugal since 1977. Privileged to have seen, firsthand, Portugal progress from a dictatorship (1974) into a stable democracy.
Not expats complaining about something else in Portugal. I don't believe it. !!!!!!!!!!!!
By J from Lisbon on 02 Jun 2022, 15:55
While I've only driven in Portugal for eight months (in Algarve) and thus can't comment on improved driving, I'm generally appalled by the seemingly lazy or perhaps unaware or distracted drivers that we encounter regularly. Putting aside signals, tailgating and overtaking concerns, the biggest issue I witness regularly is driving in the middle of small, winding roads, and not respecting that two cars need to occupy the same space. Very dangerous to correct on blind corners and I've seen near misses. The next most dangerous is the speed at which many drive on narrow, and fairly poorly engineered roads thatweren't developed for speed. This also occurs with numerous, large trucks with big loads, and whether on the N2, the EN 270, or just a small local road, in general they drive far to fast for the weight and size of their vehicle. I always keep to the right and am constantly on the lookout for poor drivers to ensure my own protection. I do also see many fine drivers, but overall I'm stunned by how many poor driving tactics I see routinely. Defensive driving is a must.
By JSD from Algarve on 02 Jun 2022, 16:06
I would agree, I have driven in italy and been in a taxi there several times, probably the scariest times i have been in a car (or even as a pedestrian for that matter). i do think the Portugues are a friendly people and want to always be haapy and calm, until they get in a car and become like the rest of europe. I sometimes think that makes them seem worse, as it is such a change of character. elsewhere people can be just as bad in or out of the car :-). Although the concept of using two parking spots for one car seems to be their normal :-)
By Lindsay from Algarve on 02 Jun 2022, 16:17
We recently returned from a wonderful holiday in Portugal... our first visit. We were in and around Porto, Lisbon, Sintra, and Lagos. I did not notice any "bad" drivers. I think the drivers here in the Tampa Bay area of Florida in the US are *far* worse!
By Joe Litton from USA on 02 Jun 2022, 17:35
Once again the author is blind anything Portugal.He constantly promotes it is all great.
It isn't and he needs to cut the **** .
Just today a driver pulled out right in front of me from a side road.
She was less than 20 metres from me when she did.
The roads are full of people with phones to their ears,drunk drivers and all sorts of other dangerous behaviour
By James from Algarve on 02 Jun 2022, 18:23
Well Paul, sounds like a great PR article for Portuguese drivers. I am from Miami where they speed, pass in the oncoming car lanes almost and sometimes causing head-ons and the cars with the sawed off mufflers sound like a cross between the loudest motorcycle entwined with an airplane and lawnmower; it's one of the reasons I'm moving to Porto which is beautiful and the people are respectful. The internet and all the devices we use to connect have made people impatient and want everything "right now." I don't feel that a lot in Porto but it's creeping in for sure. I told everyone I'd be fine driving in Portugal since I started driving in NYC and live through Miami. Turn signals, I'm used to it but I was really blown away with how close behind me the cars came up to the rear of my rental. Had I stopped short it would have been an accident and I drove 10 days in Gaia & Porto.
i'm glad you say driving has improved there (wonder what it was like before lol) but you must have a lot of rear end collisions (photo) and that means insurance rates will rise. A word to the wise; DON'T TAILGATE or you'll spend the time you were trying to save filling out an accident report AND renting a car while yours is in the body shop. Either practice patience or leave for your destination earlier. Don't let the ratrace US lifestyle creep into Portugal who are famous for not rushing because it's not a good feeling being rushed or being so addicted (zombie social media generation) to your phone that you don't take in what's around you; there's more to your life than being addicted and brainwashed and it WILL show up in your driving habits!
By Wes from USA on 03 Jun 2022, 04:10
The worst are those that appear to be running late, the truck drivers that drive in your lane, even the local buss drivers, and even all of those that are using your lane as they round a curve because most are going to fast anyway.
By Steven from Algarve on 03 Jun 2022, 06:21
“99 percent of drivers stop to allow you to cross”: that´s awesome, sounds like a totally different experience from mine. You should come to Lisbon, even residential areas with schools around, ppl driving couldn´t care less. They´ll see you at a distance in front of a zebra crossing and-I kid you not- they´ll speed towards you; when almost running you over they´ll wave (as if to say it couldn´t be helped?). These ones get my special wave in the review mirror, I flip them a finger, or 2, if both hands are free, and curiously, as I do some slow down! And I think to myself “Weren´t you in a big hurry? What happened??” lol. Seriously, 99% drivers stopping is AWESOME by any standards, maybe you could ask those drivers to educate the ones here in Lisbon, a crash course in basic circulation/traffic rules? Here what I see is ppl stopping as the exception (I give those the best treatment-run while I smile and bow my head), my precious 1%.
By guida from Lisbon on 03 Jun 2022, 06:22
I have to disagree with you! In my town, very few drivers, if any, stop at a stop sign. At a junction near my property there have been four collisions already this year. My own car was severly damaged last August resulting in over €4000 of damage when a PORTUGUESE idiot failed to stop, his excuse, "I thought you were turning into my road", despite the fact that I was not indicating, something else that the Portuguese rarely do.
By Greg from Other on 03 Jun 2022, 09:44
I am also from Miami (moved fron NYC)and we have our share bad and obnoxious drivers.
I find two problems here.
On the highways, it seems that the driver in back of me needs to be on top of me.
People dont know how to drive in traffic circles
By jeff from USA on 03 Jun 2022, 09:48
Driving in my area (Ribatejo) is poor, especially after the usual liquid lunches! Indicators are optional and seldom used, lane crossing and either very slow (when drunk) or very fast. Tailgating is a national sport. My tactic is to slow down until they decide to overtake, very p**sed off!
By Russell Taylor from Other on 03 Jun 2022, 10:03
I don't accept the complacency implicit in this article. There may be fewer deaths and accidents on the roads in Portugal today, but things could be far better if people observed the rules. I regularly see cars crossing over or driving on the continuous white line in the middle of the road, and failure to indicate when turning. Both of these misdemeanours can cause accidents. As Wes mentioned, there's also an issue with today's 'screaming mad rush' society where people want to live their lives at breakneck speed and don't have any patience. Accidents are caused, they don't just happen for no reason. Worth remembering!
By Billy Bissett from Porto on 03 Jun 2022, 10:35
Porto drivers
I have been living in Aldoar for nearly three years.
I have yet to meet an expat from Britain who thinks Porto drivers are safe
No signalling.
Undertaking
Suicidal overtaking
No concept of braking distance
No concept of threat assessment/evaluation
Dangerous double parking
Tailgating at speed
Drivers go through amber and red traffic lights (even buses!)
Drivers going all the way round a roundabout on the outside to turn left
Motor bikes doing wheelies in inappropriate streets (including one with a
small child pillion passenger)
Drivers using mobiles - very frequent.
"Entitled" drivers (Mercedes, BMW, Volvo, Tesla, Audi) exceeding the speed limits
and being "pushy".
Yesterday I saw a small Audi with its engine compartment totally demolished. How does that happen on the Leça da Palmeira seafront?
I see almost every one of these offences DAILY.
I am seventy five years old and have been driving for fifty five. I have had one accident which was my fault (roundabout rear shunt - classic!) in all that time.
By Richard Haylock from Porto on 03 Jun 2022, 10:39
Back in 70’s/80’s the amount of ridiculous accidents, injury and death was truly appalling on Portuguese roads. As a tourist you took your life in your own hands driving around Lisbon, but thankfully taxis were so cheap you could hand that responsibility to the driver. However, having driven around the islands and mainland over the past 10 years I would concur the standard of driving is much, in fact significantly, improved. Probably down to better road design and surfaces, safer modern cars and the education of drivers, it’s no better or worse than the majority of Continental Europe. I do get concerned dangerously short feeder junctions on to fast dual carriageways in Madeira , but that’s more down to the topography, and driving in rain, where perhaps some Portuguese drivers could benefit from taking more account of driving conditions in hand. Other than that I’m more than happy to drive on the road with Portuguese drivers, obviously accepting the lesser use of indicators and the occasional local tailgater.
By Paul Turner from UK on 03 Jun 2022, 11:36
They might not be the worst but the driving practices are unsafe. You only have to drive behind a learner driver to understand why. I've been behind learner drivers who have been speeding in restricted speed zones, learners who whizz into the tiniest gap at roundabouts, enough to cause me to wince. All of this with the instructor in the car. If the teaching is bad, the future drivers will be bad.
By Miriam from Other on 03 Jun 2022, 12:56
The statistics given by the Euro Road Safety website do not support the opinions of the author of the article. In 2020 Portugal had by far the most traffic deaths of any country in Western Europe!
By gary sussman from Porto on 03 Jun 2022, 14:55
Having covered over 1500km on a journey from Algarve to the north and back this week and a regular driver in the Algarve my observations and relation to the statistics are as follows.
Some of the driving is good a lot of it is dangerous for several reasons including drunkenness, excessive speed, poor road positioning, excessively slow driving by people on the phone, being old, no awareness of what is around them. These are global problems but seemingly affecting southern and eastern Europe more than the north. Figures for deaths and accidents per capita on its own is meaningless as there are many other factors, including population density, quality of roads, age etc. Only when you drill down far enough will you get to the root causes of the problem. In Portugal as a driver it is your fault if you hit a pedestrian even if they are drunk and run out in front of you.
However there are countries where the quality of driving is to my experience a lot worse, including Italy, Vietnam, Cambodia, mMalaysia to name a few.
By David Clark from Algarve on 03 Jun 2022, 15:46
There are bad drivers everywhere in the world. Good drivers and driving responsibly has to start with all of us.
By Lisa from Other on 03 Jun 2022, 18:01
Enjoyed "Tailgating is a national sport" and the advice to slow down and let them pass from Russell. Guida, skip flipping the finger to anyone as that can escalate a situation to "Road & Roid Rage" which is a big thing in the US and no good comes of it; swearing loud in the car works! lol and lets not all start with the horns like NYC and Miami.
By Wes from USA on 04 Jun 2022, 04:25
I am a member of the institute of advanced motoring society in UK living in Coimbra district. A few points on Portuguese driving;
Tail Gating (to close to the vehicle in front) is atrocious and highly dangerous.
Motor bikers thinking (not all) thinking their on the racetrack and atrocious speeding through villages and not observing the speed limits..car drivers also.
Smoking diesel vehicles..many should not be on the road..extremely toxic and very unhealthy for pedestrians.
Yes i am afraid i put Portuguese drivers in categories.
Reasonable; 25%
Careless; 50%
Dangerous; 25%
In the top worst countries in the world the bad driving i'm sorry to say.. and how many drivers passed a driving test is very intriguing.. and Mot's on CO diesel emissions should definitely be stricter.
Sorry to Portuguese drivers but things need to improve drastically.
By John Miles from Porto on 04 Jun 2022, 08:07
Roundabouts are a problematic.
First, the rule on priority once one is on the roundabout and where to drive and how to exit is unclear. The law requires you to behave in one way, the insurance companies apply another rule.
Second, when on a roundabout one should drive carefully and be aware that some drivers do not know the rule (how can they as the law is confusing) and that others behave like cowboys recklessly imposing their "right".
By HDL from Algarve on 04 Jun 2022, 10:01
On the question of drivers in Portugal being the most dangerous. We have been visiting Portugal regularly for nearly 2 decades, driving mainly between Lisbon and Portalegre, occasionally Faro to Portalegre. In all this time we have never felt in danger on the roads, quite the opposite as we always greatly enjoy our trips. The roads are generally in great order and there are plenty of resting places along the way. We do a lot of city driving and we would much prefer to drive in and out of Lisbon than we would in and out of our capital city of London, where driving standards do need improving.
By James from UK on 04 Jun 2022, 11:10
ROUNDABOUTS .... If drivers' would just obey the lane rules (where possible) and INDICATE - P L E A S E !!!
I've lost count of the numbers of near-misses I've had at roundabouts.
By sr from Algarve on 04 Jun 2022, 11:34
I am from Montréal and now live in Algarve and find that I have encountered a few "tailgaters" and incessant speeding on my road (which leads to the beach in Portimão), but it is nothing compared to Paris, or Montréal where you have to constantly keep your eyes on the road - not the traffic - looking out for crater-sized potholes, or the never ending parade of orange construction cones on virtually every street and the road rage due to frustration... so I will take the occasional bad driver here to those from my hometown.
By Lorie from Algarve on 04 Jun 2022, 15:36
Fatalities per capita are not the only measure of bad driving, and are highly dependent on the particular local statistical definitions, population density, demographics and road conditions - most road accidents do not result in fatalities. I've lived and driven in Europe, North America, Asia and Australia. Portuguese drivers might have improved but there is still a lot of dangerous, aggressive driving here, far worse than Northern Europe or Australia/NZ. These kinds of articles that attack people who point out problems are a little silly. People perceive Portuguese driving is bad because it is in fact bad. Driving while looking at your phone is common and incredibly dangerous. To say "who hasn't done it?" as if it's not important is bizarre. There are plenty of developed countries where you can step into a pedestrian crossing knowing cars will stop. Try that in Lisbon and see how long you last.
By Paul from Lisbon on 04 Jun 2022, 19:17
Honestly I had to check to see if it wasn't April 1st. I suggest the author try driving around the main routes between Lisbon and Cascais and Sintra (Marginal, IC19, A5). Routine tailgating at high speed, pulling out at junctions and roundabouts to oncoming traffic, accelrating when traffi c lights turn to red not to mention overtaking in continous lines on roads. I have driven in many countires including Italy and, in my opinion, I have not found and worse drivers than the Portuguese. Deaths on the roads and major accidents are very much the norm around here. Please comment on your area but not he major metropolitan areas, they jusy cannot be compared when it comes to driving.
By TONY HENRIQUES from Lisbon on 05 Jun 2022, 07:17
Inconsiderate maybe. But I came from NZ where roads deaths average 360 per year in a population of 5 million. Tail gating and dangerous overtaking are two manouvres the Portuguese excel at!
By Ian from Other on 06 Jun 2022, 17:36
Is the writer serious? There is NEVER a time that we drive on the roads in Portugal where we don’t see unsafe driving. Every single day, every single trip there are people driving way too close to the car in front of them.
Just today there was a work truck from a very well know garden center that is on the N125 following dangerously close to the car in front of it. There was zero chance it could have stopped before plowing into the car in front of him. What a shame it would have been if the driver killed someone else’s grandfather because grandpa was driving too slow and his life wasn’t worth an extra car length of following distance.
There is a reason why Portugal’s driving record has gotten so much better. In the not too distant past road deaths in Portugal were three times those of the UK. Three times!
I’m not sure what measures the GNR are doing to ensure safe driving. I’ve seen GNR vehicles driving dangerously themselves pulling the exact same unsafe driving tricks as the other drivers on the road. Pulling people over at the roundabouts is not in any way effective in stopping unsafe driving. Allowing people to treat the toll roads like the Autobahn only reinforces the idea that there are no road rules and people are free to drive any way they please.
But Cart Blanche for continued terrible driving and complete lack of any sort of traffic rules enforcement because there’s other countries that have bad drivers. I guess that “one of the safest countries” and friendliest people headlines that are constantly touted do not apply to the roads.
There is a reason why this is a constant complaint about driving in Portugal and not just a collective hallucination of expats, as the writer seems to indicate.
By * from Other on 07 Jun 2022, 16:53
I leave the driving to my Taxi drivers which I have in every city I spend time in...My Taxi driver in Cascais had someone hit his car and cause 2k worth of damage to his vehicle...My driver in Braga took me to Oporto and we watched a Frito Lay driver text and look at his cell phone weaving all over the autostrada...When I lived in Alcantara you had inpatient folks try to drive around the autocarro and cause serious accidents...Yes your driving sucks in Portugal....You Dig!
By sakamoto suarez from Lisbon on 23 Jun 2022, 21:08
The vehicles in Portugal where i live (central) Coimbra area are the the worst drivers errr! In the worlds (and i have the travel experience to make this comment) Tailgating, speeding in villages, dangerous overtaking. Many many Motorcyclist are errr! as bad or worst. How do they ever pass a driving test..the women are as bad. The diesel fumes on lots of these vehicles are atrocious..how do they ever get though a mot inspection. All in all I wonder how Portugal have been allowed in the European union with these disgraceful figures when the world is shouting GREEN at all people. Iam already a subscriber to Portugal News.
By John miles from Beiras on 22 Mar 2023, 19:59