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Factsheet 1 – May 2007
Cyclists share the roads with motor vehicles. If you are a cyclist, then for your own safety, and the safety of other road users, you must follow the road rules for cycle riders, and you must have the right equipment.
It's compulsory for all cyclists on New Zealand roads to wear cycle helmets. Your cycle helmet must:
Check that your helmet is the right size – it should fit snugly on your head with a minimum use of pads. It's not a good idea to buy a child a helmet that they will 'grow into'.
If your cycle helmet gets damaged, replace it with a new one.
Please note that if a police officer stops you and asks to inspect your helmet, you must give it to them.
If you ride during the hours of darkness, you must:
Legally, 'hours of darkness' means:
Be considerate to other road users. If the road is narrow, check that you are not slowing the traffic flow, and let motor vehicles pass as soon as it's safe.
Your cycle must have the following equipment.
Your cycle must have good brakes on the front and back wheels. (If the cycle was made before 1 January 1988, the law only requires a brake on the back wheel.)
You must have a rear reflector that is visible from a distance of 100 metres when light shines on it (eg a car's headlights).
You may have yellow or amber pedal reflectors on the forward and rearward-facing surfaces of each pedal.
If you want to ride your cycle on the road during the hours of darkness, it must have:
and
It's up to you to:
If you don't, you could get an infringement fine or be taken to court.
Manufacturers and retailers must make sure that any cycle they sell, and its equipment, complies with the law. Standards markings and information supplied by manufacturers can be used to show that a cycle and its equipment comply.
It's an offence to sell a cycle helmet that doesn't meet an approved standard.
Every cycle helmet must meet an approved standard. Your helmet should have a sticker inside it stating which standard it complies with.
The approved standards stickers are:
Complies with standard ASTM F1447-1994
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Complies with standards AS/NZS 2063:1996, NZS 5439 or AS 2063.2

Complies with standard Snell B90 or B95

Complies with European standard EN 1078.
The US Consumer Product Safety Commission's bicycle helmet safety standard is also approved.