
Australia has seen a spike in misinformation related to fabricated traffic rules -- the latest includes a purported new national law that requires drivers to keep their headlights on at all times. A review of each state's and territory's latest traffic regulations reveals there have been no changes to when motorists should turn on their headlights -- at night and in bad weather.
"From November 5, 2025, Australian drivers must have their headlights on at all times while driving to increase visibility and reduce accidents," reads a November 3, 2025 Facebook post, with the Adelaide-based user adding that non-compliance with "the new law" carries a fine of A$250 ($164).
The false post echoes many websites announcing similar claims -- though the exact start date for the supposed new legislation varies, with some saying it would begin on November 1 while another said November 15.
Australian media have recently reported on a proliferation of fake road rules debunked by transport authorities -- including a purported night curfew for drivers over 60 years old, and new fines for drivers eating, drinking or smoking at the wheel (archived here and here).
Josh Murray, transport secretary of Australia's most populous New South Wales (NSW) state said the fabricated rule -- along with other similar claims circulating online -- is false.
"We recommend relying on a trusted source, like the NSW Government website, to get the right advice and correct information," he told AFP on November 5.
Georgia Linnell, a media spokesperson for the neighbouring Victoria state's transport and planning department, also pointed AFP to rules on the department's website stipulating drivers in the state must use headlights at night and in "hazardous conditions with reduced visibility" (archived link).
This is similar to local laws in other parts of Australia, including in Queensland, the Australian Capital Territory, Tasmania, Northern Territory, South Australia and Western Australia (archived here, here, here, here, here and here).
None of them mentions the lights must be on at all times.
AFP found that many of the sites spreading the false claim are linked to a WhatsApp channel that appears to promote financial schemes.
These campaigns would be "a profitable exercise" by generating traffic to web pages, according to Sabrina Caldwell, a researcher on disinformation at The Australian National University (archived link).
"And the old rule is still true -- if it looks too good to believe or too weird to believe, then it's probably not true," she told AFP by phone on November 7.
AFP has previously fact-checked claims about Australian legislation.
latest_posts
- 1
'Dancing with the Stars' semifinals: How to watch Episode 10 tonight, where to stream, who's left and more - 2
Best Food Truck Cooking: Decision in favor of Your #1! - 3
島崎和歌子「フェイクマミー」第6話でTBS金ドラ17年ぶり出演 初の祖母役「吹き出物が出るほど大変」(スポニチアネックス) - 4
MLB激震 2投手が賭博で起訴…26歳右腕は逮捕 『不正投球』で4つの罪 絶対的守護神に後輩が加担 連邦検察が発表(サンケイスポーツ) - 5
Vote in favor of Your #1 BWM Vehicles
Flourishing in a Cutthroat Work Market: Vocation Methodologies
Putting resources into Yourself: Self-awareness Techniques
スシローが好調、中国でも人気拡大 FOOD & LIFEが最高益を更新(ITmedia ビジネスオンライン)
都営大江戸線4km延伸は「誰得」なのか? バス限界&人口減少を無視? “黒字化40年”試算を考える(Merkmal)
Elite Execution Wall televisions for Film Darlings
A Manual for Nations with Incredible Food
Find the Future of Outsourcing: Exploring the Gig Economy
5 Signs Now is the ideal time to Update Your Android Telephone: When to Take the Action
The 10 Most Progressive Logical Disclosures













