Ch. 1 · Common Conduct

At night, visibility was good and there were no other vehicles or pedestrians, so I entered a road with a "No Entry" sign. This is not a traffic violation.

[True / False · Medium]

Answer: ✕ False

Explanation

The Rules of the Road define regulatory signs as those that prohibit specific traffic methods. Regardless of traffic volume or time of day, entering where a No Entry sign is posted is a violation. Unless a supplementary sign specifies time restrictions, entry is prohibited at all times.

Driving school curriculumStage 1 – Topic 2: Following traffic signals

Hikari
Hikari
If there's no one around and I can see clearly, slipping through shouldn't be a problem, right?
Yui
Yui
Actually, that's false. A No Entry sign means absolutely no entry, period—it doesn't matter if it's the middle of the night or the road's empty.
Hikari
Hikari
Wait, really? Even when conditions are perfect?
Yui
Yui
Yep! Unless there's a time-restriction sign posted with it, No Entry means never. Think of it as a hard boundary—no exceptions.

Source: Ch. 1 Common Conduct · Section (第2節 信号) · Rules of the Road, Ch.1 §2 / 2(2) Regulatory signs prohibit certain traffic behaviors or designate specific ways of traveling. The types of signs and their meanings are as listed in Appendix 3(1).

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Source content excerpted from the NPA “Rules of the Road” instructional manual, in the public domain under Japanese Copyright Act Article 13(2). Explanations are AI-assisted and copyrighted by the MenkyoQuest editorial team.