Most drivers never think about their fog lights until thick fog rolls in and visibility drops on the road. I learned this the hard way during a winter drive when poor visibility forced me to find the switch in a panic.
Fog Lights
Fog lights exist to stop you from being a danger to others and to keep you safe while cutting through reduced visibility; using them at the right times keeps you out of trouble, while flicking them on at the wrong times can land you a roadside fine.
UK law has come a long way in leaps and bounds, and while it sounds almost unnecessary today, the law still treats a tail lights rear of car fitting as a legal requirement, even though front fog lamps remain optional.
Car makers often use front fog lamps as a styling extra to attract buyers toward higher spec models, and you’ll typically spot them as a mid-spec models and upward feature, working as an aesthetic feature that sets these trims apart from basic versions.
Many newer vehicles skip this optional extra altogether now that main headlight units and daytime running lights handle visibility duties.
Driving through inclement weather or facing winter driving conditions without knowing the rules risks breaking the law and endangering everyone nearby, which is exactly why this guide offers useful information to help you cut through fog, see clearly, and see you better during truly wintery driving conditions.

How to Locate/Turn On Fog Light
Finding the right symbols shouldn’t be a guessing game. If you’re stuck, your owner’s manual or the logbook will show you exactly where to look, and in most vehicles you’ll need your dipped headlights on before the fog light symbols will even respond.
Rather than clustering everything onto the main control panel, a lot of cars house these toggles on their own, occasionally splitting them into individual buttons for the forward and backside lights, while some use a rotary light switch control where you simply pull the switch toward you.
Watch the instrument cluster carefully: the front fog light symbol points the same way as the headlamp symbol, while the rear fog light symbol sits in the opposite direction, showing a lamp pointing left with lines running diagonally down through a vertical wavy line, compared with horizontal lines crossing a wavy line for the rear version.
Since the ignition switch generally deactivates fog lamps automatically, encountering a vehicle running them in fair weather conditions is typically a sign of driver oversight.
Always double check after restarting your journey, because once that switch on moment happens it won’t reverse itself.
When to Use Fog Light System
Here’s the simple rule I always follow: switch on your fog light system the moment visibility drops below 100 metres, roughly the length of a football pitch, but only when conditions are genuinely foggy or wrapped in heavy mist.
These lights burn bright, and using them outside genuine mist will simply dazzle other drivers, possibly earning you a roadside fine for your trouble.
The Highway Code backs this up directly under Rule 226, which states that headlights become compulsory once visibility is seriously reduced, generally below 328 feet, and that fog light system must be switched off the moment conditions improve.
Street lights offer a useful benchmark, as they are separated by approximately 183 metres (200 yards) on 30mph stretches. If you lose sight of the next post while driving past one, you’re likely in foggiest conditions or snowiest conditions where fog light lamps genuinely help.
Treat your fog light system as a useful extra tool, not a guarantee of safety, because they won’t make your car invincible. Common sense still applies during good visibility at night when your main lights handle everything fine.
Slow down, increase your distance, watch for slippery roads, and remember that insurance claims after an accident can get complicated if you were struggling to see and leave them on and avoid constantly toggling the switch, as doing so will only end up bewildering everyone else on the road.
When NOT to Use Fog Light System
Once the fog cleared, switch off your lights immediately, since leaving them on risks dazzling every other road users nearby.
Prevailing weather conditions shift fast; fog tends to form in the early morning and melt away as the sun rises, so keep checking and evaluate the situation throughout your drive.
After a broken journey, your fog light system will likely have turned off with the ignition, meaning you’ll need to switch on yourself again if conditions still call for it.
Rule 236 of the Highway Code spells this out clearly: you must not use fog light system unless visibility is seriously reduced, because they obscure brake lights and must be switched off the moment things improve.
Rear units burn brighter than your standard tail lights, meaning other drivers might miss your brake lights entirely when you slow down, since the extra glow can mask when you actually illuminate the brakes.
Skip the fog light when it’s dry, and avoid them in the dark too, since the lamp housings lack proper reflectors found in main beam headlights, so they offer no extra light for seeing the road ahead.
Using them while it’s wet creates its own danger: the brightness doubles through reflection off a wet road surface, and that red light can throw glare across other windscreens, especially while raining.
Front fog light lamps that are poorly adjusted become a genuine distraction, throwing dazzling reflections straight back at oncoming traffic.
Rear Fog Lights
Unlike the yellow or white light from the front units, rear fog light glow red specifically to indicate position to drivers behind you.
During foggy weather, accidents happen often because it’s genuinely difficult to tell whether cars moving ahead have actually become cars stopped on the road, and a glowing rear light helps prevent exactly that confusion.
This is precisely why keeping a bigger gap, or braking distance, between vehicles matters so much in tricky driving conditions.
Daytime Running Lights vs. Fog Light Lamps
Modern cars increasingly favour LED daytime running lights, or DRLs, over front fog light lamp, and these now sit as a legal requirement on new models.
They aren’t meant to light your way, even though some burn bright enough to do exactly that, but rather to keep you visible to other road users sharing the road.
If your car features automatic lights triggered by low light levels, double check they’re actually active, since they don’t always trigger correctly during genuine foggy conditions.
Drivers relying on daytime running lights should also confirm their rear lights are switched on, since many vehicles with this setup only illuminate the front lights, leaving the back completely dark.
What to Do When Driving in Fog
Before fog swallows the road ahead, check mirrors, then slow down immediately. Build a greater distance between yourself and the car ahead, stretching the usual two seconds gap toward four seconds, and keep your wipers running with the windscreen properly demisted for clear visibility.
If a signal warns of fog but the road looks clear, stay ready for a sudden bank of fog or drifting, patchy fog appearing without warning.
Switch your lights on once visibility drops below 100 metres, or 328 feet, roughly a football pitch in length, and know exactly where your fog-light switch sits before setting off.
Never use full beam, since fog reflects that light straight back and ends up reducing visibility even further.
Avoid trying to navigate using the tail lights ahead of you, because that creates a false sense of security during limited visibility.
When things get bad, wind down windows near junctions and crossroads so you can listen for approaching traffic you cannot see. If conditions become impossible, consider stopping entirely until it’s safe again.
Worth remembering: mist and fog aren’t quite the same thing, and there’s an oddly named condition called freezing fog that catches many drivers off guard.
Other Tips for Driving in Fog
Beyond switching on your lights properly, a few habits make foggy drives noticeably safer. Reduce speed to match the actual road conditions, increase your braking distance so there’s more space between you and the car in front, and pay attention to your surroundings while staying genuinely stay alert.
Keep an eye out too, since plenty of other drivers still forget to switch on their fog light system at all.
Stay Safe on the Road
Fog lights create a critical safety advantage in unsafe driving conditions, helping prevent accidents across the road, so knowing when to turn them on and how to use them protects everyone involved.
Getting your vehicle serviced regularly also matters, since it keeps your fog light system in proper working order exactly when you need them most.
FAQs of Fog Lights
When should I use my fog lights?
Switch on your fog lights the moment visibility drops below 100 metres, roughly a football pitch, in genuine foggy or heavy mist conditions.
Can I get a fine for using fog lights at the wrong time?
Yes, using fog lights when visibility hasn’t dropped can dazzle other drivers and lead to a genuine roadside fine.
What’s the difference between front and rear fog lights?
Front fog lights glow white to light the road ahead, while rear fog lights glow red to help drivers behind see you.
Are front fog lights a legal requirement?
No, front fog lights are not legal requirement, but rear fog lights are a genuine legal requirement on every vehicle.
Why must I switch off my fog lights once visibility improves?
Leaving them on can obscure brake lights and dazzle other road users, putting everyone’s safety at real risk.

