Dutch police have handed out an average of 850 fines a week since a ban on using mobile phones while cycling came into force two years ago.
Using a phone, without hands free, while cycling has been a traffic violation since 2019 across the Netherlands and people caught breaking the rules face a €100 fine.
Dutch News reports that it is not yet clear whether the ban was having an impact on cycling safety due to a lack of collision data.
A police spokesperson told the website that while phone use by cyclists was not something officers proactively targeted, ‘If [we] spot a cyclist using his phone [we] will stop them and warn or fine them’.
Earlier this year a cyclist in Queensland, Australia was fined A$1,000 (£548) for talking on her mobile phone while riding.
> Cyclist in Australia fined A$1,000 for talking on her phone
In the UK, where motorists are banned from using a handheld mobile phone as a communication device, punishable by a £200 fine and six penalty points, there is no specific offence relating to using a mobile phone while cycling.
However, doing so could result in police fining the cyclist for careless cycling, which carries a maximum penalty of a £1,000, and occasionally we do get reports of police targeting riders who are using phones.
Rule 70 of the Highway Code says that cyclists ‘must not ride in a dangerous, careless or inconsiderate manner.’

4 thoughts on “Dutch police hand out 850 fines per week to cyclists using mobile phones”
Cycle paths in NL can be so
Cycle paths in NL can be so busy I can see why they’ve had to introduce this law.
I’d go further and ban people walking whilst staring at their phones. Seems to be more of a problem, I’ve had people nearly bump into me doing that numerous times. Plus, much better for your mental health getting a break from the screen!
Couldn’t agree more. But
Couldn’t agree more. But things ‘have been improved’, you see.
Hence they are much worse than previously!!
Wait – are they saying hands
Wait – are they saying hands-free is fine?
Yes, just using it whilst it
Yes, just using it whilst it is in your hands, either for phoning or increasingly in the UK as well, for texting / whats-apping.