In most areas of the United States, the car on the right has the right of way if they meet crosswise. If they meet head to head, the driver wanting to turn left does not have the right of way over the car going straight. This rule varies from state to state. In any event, emergency vehicles always have the right of way in any direction.
Any cars in an intersection have the right of way to finish their travel through the intersection.
Generally the one that arrived first.
The car on the right.
At a standard 4-way intersection, the drivers of any three cars arriving at exactly the same time can easily tell which one is on the right. Each driver looks to his (or her) right. Two of them will see a car to their right. One will see an unoccupied part of the intersection, or a car that clearly arrived after the first three. That is the car "on the right" and the one that should go first. If four cars arrive at the intersection simultaneously (very unlikely) it is almost certain the at least one of the drivers will believe he (or she) got there first and will pull into the intersection. The rest will follow in reasonable order.
the person to the right
- A driver approaching an intersection must yield the right-of-way to traffic already in the intersection. (traffic in the intersection has the right of way) - If drivers are approaching an intersection from opposite directions, the driver turning left must yield to approaching traffic going straight or turning right. (traffic going straight or turning right has the right-of-way) - Two drivers at an intersection that arrived at the same time at a right angle. The driver on the left must yield the right-of way. ( the driver on the right has the right of way) -Never insist on the right-away
If it is an un-controlled intersection, the vehicle to the right has the right-of-way. In North America , the vehicle approaching the intersection on the right has the right of way, Yield to the car on your right.
When two or more vehicles come to a stop at a 4 way intersection, the vehicle that arrived first proceeds first. In the event that the vehicles come to a stop at the same time, the car on the right proceeds first.
If you reach an uncontrolled intersection at close to the same time, the vehicle who actually reached the intersection last is the driver who must yield the right of way. If you reach the intersection at the same time, the driver on the left should yield the right of way.
A right angle.
This does actually happen, no one should ever say things never happen, so when it does, cars traveling north and south go first, then cars driving east and west go next. If a driver is turning left, he or she must yield. Also its important to know that the person to your right has the "right" of way.
the car on the left of the intersection has to give right of way to the car on the right