From Common Helmet Laws to Possibly Embarrassing Situations

Dec. 16 2016 Announcements By Ryan S. DeMars

Motorcycle training courseI must admit, when I sat down to write about motorcycle laws I thought this would be fairly easy. I have had the privilege to live in many states and the opportunity to visit many more, but with a closer look at some motorcycle laws state by state (provided by AAA), I realize that I might not have been always legal when riding in different states.

First, we all know that every state has their basic laws, and the first one you must deal with is licensure requirements. For example, I admittedly rode without a license for many years when I lived on the East Coast.

It wasn’t because I wasn’t a capable rider that couldn’t pass the test, but instead I couldn’t afford a street legal bike that had all the turn signals nor brakes for that matter. And despite the fact the I started riding two wheels when I was 12, my parents always hated motorcycles, therefore they would have never allowed me to take written or the road test.

So, when I moved to Alabama to go to college, the first thing I did was get my class M.

ride with a helmetBut even getting your class M, differs from state to state.

In Alabama, you only need to pass the written test, but when I moved to California, I would have had to take both a written and a road test if I didn’t already have my class M.

In Texas, where I live now, you are required to pass the written test and a state approved motorcycle safety course, which I think every state should require (it would have save me a lot of hard lessons learned).

Why am I babbling on about different state requirements?

Well, because unlike cars, we riders have to be aware of not only the laws in our own state, but that of others, especially if you plan to do a road trip that encompasses multiple states.

Motorcycle Helmet LawsThe first and arguable the most important is helmet laws. According to the Insurance Institute of Highway safety, 19 states and D.C. require all riders to wear helmets and 28 states require helmets only for those under a certain age like Arizona and Texas.  While just 3 states have no helmet laws (Illinois, Iowa and New Hampshire), though New Hampshire requires protective head gear but not helmet.

Regardless if you are advocate of the freedom to chose or not, knowing important details such as helmets laws can keep your great American road trip from turning memorable to miserable.

No one wants to take off from Key West with no helmet, no worries, and long locks flowing in the wind, only to cross the Georgia state line and get busted for not wearing a DOT approved helmet.  

Other laws can be little bit more odd:

In Alaska, if you want to take in the breath-taking landscape with some of your favorite tunes, then you better have external speakers because helmet speakers are prohibited.

side car motorcyclesIn Maine, you're out in your 60s Bonneville with side car cruising the docks. You see a damsel in distress and offer her a ride, she slides into the side car. Your feeling happy...

That was until she waves her New England Patriot linebacker looking boyfriend to come on. You freeze up, shocked by the sheer size of him. Well he can’t ride in the side car with her, because it is illegal for two to be in there, instead he hopes on back and wraps his big meat hook contraptions around you, making you uneasy, as you recall past episodes of “The Worst Prisons in America”.

If you would have read the laws beforehand, you might have been able to think quick enough to tell her to sit behind you, while “Gronk” squeezes into the side car. Better yet, you might have been able to just kick dirt, peeling away leaving the man-fridge in the dust.

Knowing the laws will not only save you from a very expensive therapy bill but it could save you from a very the unfortunate encounter with the fuzz.

Not that law enforcement is bad, but we ride to get away from authority figures (my wife), our work, and all the stress that our lives bottle up. Riding is our therapy and we need to make it stress-free.

Here are a couple links you can use to see if you are update with your state laws.