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Texas Emergency Vehicle Light Laws

Texas Statutes for Emergency & Special Vehicle Lighting

1. Authorized Emergency Vehicles

Under Texas Transportation Code §547.702, “authorized emergency vehicles”—such as police cars, fire trucks, and ambulances—must use signal lamps that:

  • Display four alternately flashing red lights, two at the front and two at the rear.
  • Be visible from 500 feet in normal daylight.
  • May optionally include alternating or flashing white lights meeting the same mounting/visibility standards.

Additionally:

  • Volunteer firefighter or EMS personal vehicles responding to emergencies may be equipped similarly.
  • Police vehicles may but aren’t required to use multiple flashing lamps.

2. Restrictions on Non-Emergency Vehicles

Per §547.305, non-emergency vehicles are restricted:

  • Cannot display red lights visible from the front, unless it's a legitimate brake/taillight.
  • May not have red, white, or blue beacons or flashing lights unless specifically authorized.
  • Security patrol vehicles may only use green, amber, or white lights.
  • Escort flag vehicles for oversized loads may use alternating or flashing blue and amber lights.
  • Vehicles needing amber warning beacons include school buses, church buses, tow trucks (in tow-mode), highway maintenance/TxDOT vehicles, and authorized emergency vehicles.

3. Work-Zone and Maintenance Vehicles

Under §547.305(d–e):

  • Highway maintenance, utility, and construction vehicles may use flashing amber lights.
  • Blue lights on driver-side and amber on passenger-side are common practice in TxDOT operations.
  • These vehicles are prohibited from flashing white lights.

Other Vehicle Lighting Requirements

True emergency signaling notwithstanding, vehicles in Texas must still follow standard safety light and reflector rules:

  • Taillamps: emit red light visible 1,000 ft rear.
  • Turn signals: front must be white or amber; rear must be red or amber.
  • Clearance/marker lights & reflectors: front/side-front = amber; rear/side-rear = red.
  • Fog, spot, auxiliary lamps, hazard lamps, and reflectors have specific mounting and beam-direction rules—per §547.327–332.

Aftermarket & Custom Lighting: Legal vs. Non-Legal

Allowed Add-Ons
  • Amber flashers/beacons: acceptable for service, utility, tow, and escort vehicles.
  • White auxiliary/flood lights (spot-lights, alley lights, take-down lights): widely used by emergency services; also permitted on personal vehicles under standard regulations.
  • Green lights: strictly for security patrol vehicles, per §547.305(e‑1).
Prohibited Lighting
  • Red or blue lights/beacons on personal, non-authorized vehicles (visible from front or side) are illegal.
  • White flashers not used on authorized emergency vehicles.
  • Magenta, purple, or other novelty “courtesy lights” are not recognized by Texas law.

Best Practices for UltraBrightLightz.com Customers

  1. Know your vehicle category: Are you operating an emergency-authorized unit, service vehicle, or personal/security vehicle?
  2. Choose appropriate colors:
    1. Emergency: red & optionally white flashing.
    2. Service/utility/tow: amber (with blue allowed per TxDOT fleet settings).
    3. Security patrol: green, amber, white only.
    4. Escort flag vehicles: blue & amber alternately.
  3. Check mounting & visibility: Lights must be high, widely spaced, and meet candlepower and sight-distance specs (e.g., 500 ft for emergency flashers).
  4. Avoid illegal combinations: No red/blue on private or unapproved vehicles. Amber is safest default for visibility without violating law.
  5. Follow standard lighting rules, even when installing extras—keep all turn, tail, clearance lamps compliant.

Legal Install Summary Table

Vehicle Type Allowed Flashing Colors
Authorized Emergency Vehicles Red (front/rear) ± White flashers, siren audible 500 ft
Volunteer First Responders Same as above, optional temporary red flashers
Security Patrol Vehicles Green, Amber, White only
Escort Flag Vehicles Alternating/Flashing Blue & Amber
Tow & Service Vehicles Amber (blue allowed for TxDOT fleets); blue/red on tow vehicles only when stopped at incidents
Highway Maintenance Vehicles Amber (plus blue on driver side); white flashers prohibited
Personal Vehicles Standard factory lighting only (no red/blue/white flashers)

Final Tips

  • Non-compliant lighting = legal risk: Unauthorized red/blue lights on private vehicles can result in citations, fines, or equipment seizure.
  • Intent matters: Temporary lighting (e.g., volunteer firefighter magnet lights) still must match statute allowances.
  • Install smart: Choose LEDs that comply with spacing, brightness, and flash pattern standards. Amber is your safest color choice outside official emergency fleets.
  • Stay updated: Lighting laws can change—research current Texas Transportation Code chapters 547 and 623 (for ESAs and escorts) before purchases.

Note: This guide is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. For specific legal guidance, consult the Texas Department of Public Safety or a legal professional. If something is incorrect and you would like to suggest an edit, please contact us.