VORT Manoeuvre Guide

U-Turn in South Australia

A U-turn is one of the five slow speed manoeuvres used in South Australian VORT preparation. It tests whether you can choose a safe and legal location, give way correctly, observe properly and turn the vehicle around in one movement without reversing.

This guide explains the U-turn in plain English for learner drivers and overseas licence holders in Adelaide. It is a training guide only and does not replace official South Australian road rules.

What Is a U-Turn?

A U-turn is a turn used to make the vehicle face the opposite direction. In VORT preparation, the U-turn should be completed safely in one continuous turn without reversing.

Goal 1

Legal location

Select a place where a U-turn is permitted and where you can complete the turn safely.

Goal 2

Give way properly

A driver making a U-turn must give way to all other road users and must not create unnecessary obstruction.

Goal 3

No reversing

The U-turn should be completed in one turn. If reversing is needed, it is no longer a simple U-turn.

Simple version: do not rush. Choose a legal place, signal clearly, give way to everyone, turn slowly under control, then accelerate smoothly when safe.

Where You Must Not Make a U-Turn

Location choice is the first part of a safe U-turn. If the location is illegal or unsafe, the manoeuvre should not be attempted.

Common no U-turn locations

  • Where there is a No U-turn sign.
  • At an intersection with traffic lights, unless a U-turn Permitted sign is displayed.
  • Across a single continuous dividing line, dividing strip or painted island.
  • Across double continuous dividing lines or a dividing strip.
  • On a one-way road.
  • Where visibility, traffic or road layout makes the turn unsafe.

Official reference: The Driver’s Handbook – signals and U-turn rules.

Choosing a Safe Location

In a lesson or test situation, the examiner may indicate that a U-turn will be required, but the driver still needs to choose a suitable place to perform it.

Good

Suitable place

  • Wide enough to complete the U-turn without reversing
  • Good visibility in front, behind and from side roads
  • No No U-turn sign or prohibited road marking
  • No traffic lights unless a U-turn Permitted sign is displayed
  • No parked vehicle, traffic island or obstacle blocking the turn
  • Enough time and space to avoid affecting other road users
Avoid

Poor place

  • Busy traffic with vehicles close behind
  • Fast approaching oncoming vehicles
  • Cars waiting behind you or on the side road you want to use
  • Safety islands, narrow side roads or parked vehicles near the turn
  • Locations where your waiting position blocks traffic
  • Any place where you are unsure whether the U-turn is legal
Training tip: if a U-turn becomes unsafe because traffic conditions change, it may be better to abandon the U-turn and take a safer option, such as turning right into a side road where legal and safe.

Step-by-Step U-Turn

Different instructors may explain the steering reference points slightly differently. The safety system is more important than one exact landmark: mirror, signal, observe, position, give way, turn, straighten and accelerate when safe.

Check that the location is legal and suitable

Before committing, check signs, traffic lights, road markings, width of the road, visibility and traffic conditions.

Check mirrors and signal

Check your centre mirror and right mirror, then signal right at a reasonable time. Do not signal so early that it misleads others.

Position the vehicle correctly

Move into a safe and legal waiting position. Do not block traffic unnecessarily. Keep enough space to complete the turn without reversing.

Give way and keep observing

Give way to oncoming traffic, vehicles behind you, side-road traffic, cyclists and pedestrians. Keep checking because conditions can change quickly.

Start the turn slowly

When it is safe, move forward gently and steer fully to the right. Keep the car slow and under control.

Look where you want the car to go

Keep scanning, but guide the vehicle toward the correct lane on the new direction of travel. Avoid staring only at the kerb.

Straighten and accelerate when safe

Straighten the steering, cancel the signal if necessary, and accelerate smoothly so you do not unnecessarily delay other traffic.

Observation Pattern

Observation during a U-turn is not just one mirror check. You need to keep checking because vehicles can appear from behind, ahead or from the right side road while you are waiting.

Stage What to check Why it matters
Before signalling Centre mirror and right mirror. To understand what is behind you before communicating your intention.
Before stopping or waiting Traffic behind, oncoming traffic, side roads and pedestrians. To avoid stopping in a place that causes obstruction or confusion.
While waiting Oncoming traffic, vehicles behind, vehicles waiting on your right and side-road traffic. Traffic conditions can change while you are waiting to turn.
Before moving All relevant directions, including blind spot where required. To confirm it is safe, legal and practical to complete the turn.
During the turn Where the vehicle is going and any changing traffic around you. To keep full control and avoid creating a safety risk.

Common Mistakes in a U-Turn

Choosing an illegal place

Traffic lights, No U-turn signs and continuous lines are common problems.

Forgetting the signal

Some students focus on steering and forget to communicate their intention.

Poor waiting position

Stopping in a place that blocks traffic behind or side-road traffic can create risk.

Starting too early

A small gap can disappear quickly. U-turns need more time than normal right turns.

Turning too late

If you steer too late, the vehicle may not complete the turn without reversing or touching the kerb.

Accelerating too slowly after the turn

After completing the turn, build speed smoothly if safe so you do not unnecessarily affect traffic.

What Can Cause a “Not Yet Competent” Result?

In a test or assessment situation, a U-turn may be marked as not yet competent if the driver does not complete the manoeuvre safely, legally and in control.

High-risk problems

  • Starting the U-turn in an illegal location.
  • Failing to give way to other road users.
  • Causing another vehicle to brake, slow sharply or take evasive action.
  • Needing to reverse to complete the turn.
  • Touching or mounting the kerb.
  • Failing to observe properly before or during the turn.
  • Losing steering, speed or lane control.
  • Unnecessarily obstructing traffic.

Instructor Tips

Tip

Pick the place before the steering

A good location makes the U-turn much easier. A poor location makes even good steering unsafe.

Tip

Do not force the U-turn

If traffic conditions change, stop and reassess. Sometimes the safest decision is to abandon the U-turn.

Tip

Use slow speed, fast steering

The vehicle should move slowly, but the steering may need to be turned decisively at the correct time.

Tip

Finish cleanly

After the turn, straighten the car, cancel the signal and accelerate smoothly when safe.

How This Connects to VORT Preparation

The U-turn is not just a steering exercise. It shows whether the driver can combine legal location choice, give way judgement, observation, signalling and low-speed control under pressure.

Legal judgement

Knowing where a U-turn is allowed and when it is not allowed.

Traffic judgement

Waiting for a safe gap and not affecting other road users.

Vehicle control

Completing the turn smoothly without reversing, touching the kerb or losing control.

To prepare properly, practise with a driving instructor first. Do not practise U-turns in busy traffic or unsafe locations.

Other VORT Manoeuvre Guides

The U-turn is one of the five slow speed manoeuvres. You can also read the other manoeuvre guides when they are available.

Moving off from kerb

Read guide

Angle park

Read guide

Reverse parallel park

Read guide

Three-point turn

Read guide

All 5 manoeuvres

View all manoeuvres

VORT overview

Read VORT guide

Official Reference

Use official sources for licensing and road-rule information because requirements may change.

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