Skip to main content

Texting behind the wheel banned in Norway from May 2013

From 2 May 2013, it will be illegal for drivers in Norway to touch their mobile phones while behind the wheel of their vehicle for any other purpose other than accepting a call or hanging up. The tougher laws on the use of mobile phones while driving were outlined by Marit Arnstad, Norway's Transport Minister. It means that text messaging and use of Facebook or other applications will be prohibited for drivers.
March 15, 2013 Read time: 1 min
From 2 May 2013, it will be illegal for drivers in Norway to touch their mobile phones while behind the wheel of their vehicle for any other purpose other than accepting a call or hanging up.

The tougher laws on the use of mobile phones while driving were outlined by Marit Arnstad, Norway's Transport Minister. It means that text messaging and use of Facebook or other applications will be prohibited for drivers.

Related Content

  • Brake and Direct Line survey: UK drivers flout traffic laws
    April 28, 2015
    Half of UK drivers in a recent survey admitted to breaking traffic laws and half of these drivers said they did it with intention. Of the drivers who willingly broke the law, half acknowledged they did it because they believed there was little chance of getting caught, or they simply did not agree the law and saw no reason to obey. Road safety charity Brake and vehicle insurance company Direct Line said the survey reveals a worrying attitude by many road users toward safety on highways. Brake said that U
  • Self driving cars for the UK
    April 20, 2022
    Self driving cars will be allowed in the UK
  • UK survey finds bad driving makes you less attractive
    August 27, 2015
    Bad driving makes people significantly attractiveness to potential partners, with women finding it especially so, according to a recent UK survey. Many people have wondered if poor driving skills put a dampener on romance and the survey from the Institute of Advanced Motorists appears to confirm this. Bad drivers were found to be 50% less attractive than motorists with good skills.
  • How IRF training is helping save lives in Jamaica
    July 20, 2012
    According to World Health Organisation figures, 307 lives were lost in over 13,000 road accidents in 2011, a figure dominated by male drivers and car occupants. Buoyed by IRF’s Safer Road by Design seminar which preceded the Congress, the Road Safety Unit in the Jamaican Ministry of Transport, Works and Housing is already taking steps to address the presence of turned-down ends and concrete utility poles on the country’s roadsides.