You don't clearly state what movement YOUR car is making. If you are both approaching the interesection from opposite directions and both want to turn left there should be no conflict unless it's an awfully small intersection. Other than that, there is no 'right-of-way" under that scenario, and you will both have to proceed with due caution to avoid a collision. On the other hand if you are turning right, and the oncoming car is turning left and both of you intend to wind up going in the same direction, the left-turning car should yield to you. The vehicle turning right always has the right-of-way.
It is a left turn where the turning driver must yield to oncoming traffic entering a cross-streets intersection because there is no left left turn signal facing that left-turning driver during which a red light stops oncoming traffic to protect the left turning vehicle. This holds in keep-to-the-right countries. For keep-to-left countries, there are, sometimes, protected right turns.
When the light turns green at an intersection, the vehicles that have the right of way are those going straight or turning right. They should proceed first before vehicles turning left or pedestrians crossing the street.
The left turn has right away
Turn only after there is no danger from oncoming vehicles
Answer about left turnsCarefully, unless you are in China. The person turning left must yield to oncoming traffic. At a regular traffic light, you should enter the intersection. When the oncoming traffic stops for the red light you Amy proceed in order to clear the intersection.
Answer about left turnsCarefully, unless you are in China. The person turning left must yield to oncoming traffic. At a regular traffic light, you should enter the intersection. When the oncoming traffic stops for the red light you Amy proceed in order to clear the intersection.
to exicute this correctly; first, you have to be on a one way street. Then the street that you are turning onto must also be a one way street. There for all traffic wanting to make a left hand turn on red, can do so because they are not required to cross oncoming traffic.
You continue through the turn but only after you make sure that there is no oncoming traffic. It is your responsibility to yield to vehicles that are coming straight through the intersection.
Left turns go last in the US as we know unless you're at a traffic light. Left turns must yield to oncoming traffic and the oncoming traffic's right turns. While you're waiting to make your left what you want to do is wait for a wide enough gap in between cars to make your left turn safely. When you see that gap in between cars, make your left.
Don't take the risk.
It is blinking by a lamp first turning on, then turning off, then turning on, then turning off...
In many cities, a right on red is legal ONLY after you have made a full stop and there is no oncoming traffic. If you fail to stop and/or yield to traffic that has the green light, you will be charged.