You need front and rear lights for cycling in the dark, but do you also need to use lights in the daytime? We look at the argument for using lights during the daytime and round up a bunch of front and rear lights to consider if you do want to increase your visibility.
The best daytime running lights
It may not have escaped your attention that all new cars sold in the UK legally have to have daytime front lights. So should cyclists also be looking to boost their visibility when cycling in the daytime with front and rear lights? In a recent survey of 500 road.cc readers on Twitter, 52% said they do want daytime lights. It perhaps wasn't the result we were expecting.
Read more: The best front lights for cycling — beam comparison plus how-to-choose guide
To meet this demand, there are a growing number of bike brands marketing lights with daytime running modes, but what does this actually mean and are they any different to lights designed for nighttime cycling?
Exposure Lights has added a new Day Bright mode to its front and rear lights this winter. And it is more than just a flashing mode says Exposure’s Mark Swift. “The DayBright pulse pattern is the most noticeable to ensure it is recognised at distance on rural roads and also enable the light to cut through the noise of the urban town or city traffic and road distractions within daylight hours," he says.
“As the pulse pattern is not regular, once seen DayBright stays highlighted by the brain's receivers and ensures the cyclist is noticed,” adds Mark.
Why would a cyclist want to use lights during the daytime? Surely there’s no need when it’s light?
“Why not!” says Specialized’s William Watt. “Beyond smart responsible riding, visibility on the road is quite simply the most important investment a rider can make in their safety, particularly in a congested urban environment where every road user has a multitude of distractions. Daytime lights give the rider that extra layer of visibility on the road, particularly for that notorious black spot on the near side of traffic.”
It's not always bright and sunny during a typical UK winter day though. It’s often murky, drab and almost dark. Daytime lights can be used in these conditions says Exposure's Mark to help make cyclists stand out in changing light conditions and when “cycling in cities between building or country road in and out of tree cover where the sun cuts through the gaps but is then eclipsed by an obstacle the drivers eyes can sometimes not adjust fast enough. DayBright ensures the cyclist is spotted.”
It’s a stance that is backed up by See.Sense, a company that launched an intelligent daylight back in 2013 and every light since has had a daytime focus. “Daylight visibility has been really important to us right from the start,” the company tells road.cc. “When you consider that 80% of cycling accidents happen during the day, attracting attention to other road users as early as possible during these times is really quite crucial. Think about modern cars, they have their lights running almost any time you see them on the road. Why shouldn't it be the same, if not even more important for cyclists?”
That 80% figure that See.Sense refers to is based on evidence compiled by ROAP and you can read more facts and figures about the number of cyclists injured or killed in accidents here.
The argument for using daytime lights is starting to gather pace, but has anyone actually carried out a detailed survey to assess the impact of cyclists running daytime lights? Handily, just such a survey exists. It was conducted in Denmark in 2004/05 with 3,845 cyclists and concluded that those cyclists with permanent running lights recorded a 19% lower incident rate than a control group not using lights.
“The study shows that use of permanent bicycle running lights reduces the occurrence of multiparty accidents involving cyclists significantly,” the controlled experiment concluded. You can read that paper here.
So should we all start using daytime lights then? See.Sense recommends using flashing lights to help attract attention sooner. “When you have lights that flash brightly from both front and rear can help alert drivers sooner than a solid light, reducing risks out on the road,” the company tell us.
13 front and rear daytime lights
If you’re interested in daytime lights, here are a selection currently available in bike shops. There are loads more lights to consider in this buyers guide and don’t forget the beam comparison engine if you’re shopping for lights as well.
The Lezyne Strip Drive 400 has been updated with a bright and really eye-catching day time flash, commendable battery life and faster charging. As with the old model, it's also fairly light, easy to operate, has loads of functions and is waterproof too. It's more of a be-seen rather than seeing light, though.
Read our review of the Lezyne Strip Drive Front
The Magicshine Seemee 30 Combo is a set of 30 lumen LED lights aiming to get you seen. The slim profile means they easily attach to seat posts, seat stays, forks or handlebars, and features such as infrared ambient light sensors are rarely found at this price. They're easy to use, stuffed with useful features and very visible around town.
Read our review of the Magicshine Seemee 30 Combo
Giant's Recon TL 200 is an excellent rear light, offering lots of brightness, useful modes and decent run-times.
The Recon TL 200 is a bigger and brighter version of the TL 100. Which you choose comes down to personal preference, but for the extra tenner the 200 gets our vote for the extra brightness and run-time it offers.
Read our review of the Giant Recon TL 200
The Exposure Link Daybright is a secondary helmet light that adds 360-degree visibility and is great for being seen in heavy traffic. Designed and made in the UK, build quality is exceptional, it's very tough and run-times are reasonable bearing in mind its size and two LEDs.
Read our review of the Exposure Link Daybright
The Blackburn Dayblazer 1100 front light is the biggest of the Dayblazer family. It's a beautifully made, five-function, compact torch type, capable of producing – surprise, surprise – 1100 lumens in its brightest setting, great for blasting along backroads, but with lower settings, pulsing and strobing for more built-up areas and for daylight running.
Read our review of the Blackburn DayBlazer 1100
The See.Sense was arguably the first smart light that used sensors to alter the brightness and speed of flash to suit different lighting conditions, as well as being able to detect car headlights. The light was so well received that it won the road.cc People’s Choice award in 2015 and they’ve since followed up with the 300 lumen Icon 2. You can read the review here.
The TraceR is Exposure’s smallest and most affordable rear light with its new Day Bright mode. It has a 75-lumen rating with a three to 24 hour run time, weighs just 35g and has three brightness levels. Side visibility has been considered in the design of the light as well.
If you want a bright and lightweight front light for commuting then the Sirius is a good option, with 575 lumens bright enough for most riding situations and a choice of seven modes, including the new DayBright. It’s easy to use and mount to the handlebars, with a tactile power button and battery gauge LED.
Lezyne has been producing lights with daytime visibility in mind for the past five years, intended to be brighter with unique flash patterns to be more visible to other road users up to 1 mile away. It offers 15 lights with a daytime flash mode, here are two contenders.
The Strip Drive 300 rear light, with its 300-lumen output, is one of the brightest lights on the market right now but there are 11 modes to choose from to suit all riding conditions. It packs a 100-lumen punch in the daytime mode, definitely ensuring you’ll boost your visibility.
Read our review of the Lezyne Strip Drive Pro 300
For front daytime lights, Lezyne offers the Lite Drive 1000XL. The small unit comprises two LEDs pumping out 1,000 lumens with a high-visibility daytime flash mode.
Read our review of the Lezyne Lite Drive 1000XL
Not to be left out, Specialized has developed the Flux 900 front light with two different LEDs with dedicated optics to provide the ideal beam pattern, and it also offers a daytime flash mode which reduces the lumen count to 300.
Bontrager was an early proponent of daytime lights and this Flare R City light is its smallest rear light. Despite its diminutive proportions, the light packs out 35 lumens from a single LED and offers up to five hours in the dedicated daytime flash mode.
Read our review of the Bontrager Flare R City
Bontrager has even had some of the Trek Factory Racer pros using daytime rear lights during the 2015 Tour de France prologue stage, but that marketing stunt aside we’ve not seen the lights in use since.
Moon offers two lights with a dedicated daytime flash mode, using a slow pulse that is designed to boost visibility as well as maximising battery runtime, with a claimed 23 hours in this mode. It’s small and light and at 120 lumens in the daytime mode plenty bright enough. There’s also a matching rear light
Read our review of the Moon Comet-X light
So daytime lights then, will you be investing or is the cynic in you thinking that the bike industry is just trying to sell more lights? Let us know in the comments section below.
Explore the complete archives of reviews of front lights and rear lights on road.cc
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122 comments
If you find them annoying its proof these lights have attracted your attention.
Where I live a lot of routes are under tree cover and simply a cyclist in dark clothing would be hidden in the shadows. Whilst Ive sometimes spotted another cyclist with a GOOD rear light, literally miles ahead.
If only some drivers could be trusted, because they cant it means I have to take extra precautions. In fact there's some busy main A-roads that I will never cycle along
Should no, but do I yes.
its more for the low sun/grey days etc, and I have some blinkies on the commute bike, the road bike is a CX so rather less of a issue!
I am firmly in the no camp for this one.
Do you know what, on certain winter or particularly miserable days, yes, stick your lights on, makes total sense. However this call for permanent day lights is bullshit.
Note that its the manufacturers that are calling the loudest for this, manufacturers who also happen to sell lights.
Go back thirty years and see who were the loudest advoctes of cycling helmets... yep it was the likes of Bell, manufacturers of motorcycling helmets looking to diversify markets.
Its a slippery slope. We'll all toe the marketers line, fit our bikes with lights until it becomes law, and shortly afterwards, anyone riding without effective lights will be seen as fair game for our ever more aggressive, self-entitled motoring friends.
Rather than pandering to this marketing bullshit, why not put effort into pushing for greater safety on our roads where it counts, and that is changing driver behaviour / mindsets. Its the only thing that can make us 'safer'.
That said, we are already perfectly safe. Perfectly. I'd imagine that nearly all fatal cycling accidents are covered by this website... our perception of risk is totally out of whack.
I run three rear lights - one each seatstay and one on my seatpost. In the day, I run the seatstay ones in flashing mode and the seatpost one in random mode. At night, I turn the seatstay ones in steady mode so drivers can judge my distance better.
Up front, I use a Cat Eye Volt 1200. In the day it's either in HyperConstant (pulsing flash) or in full flash mode. At night it's usually at the half-power 600 lumen mode.
I live in a country where pretty much nobody watches out for cyclists, much less those that can keep pace with city traffic, so most times I feel I have to be really un-subtle about being seen.
I use a rear light on most rides in winter particualry in low light conditions.
Only use a front light at night or in darkness.
I just people would turn them on steady mode in a group ride
Has anyone else noticed how many cars have ONLY their daytime running lights in at night? Obviously seeing lights out front fools the driver into thinking they have all their lights on when the reality is the rear lights aren’t on and the cars are unlit from behind? An unfortunate example of ‘enhanced’ safety proving to be anything but. My own thoughts are that the more automated you make any process, (sat nav, automatic gears, automatic lights) the less the driver is engaged. The side effect is they stop thinking for themselves and end up concentrating on other things ........like their phones.
The problem is that in addition to the always-on DRLs many dashboards are now permanently lit (usually because they're entirely digital). Takes away a valuable visual clue as to when you should be turning your lights on - if its dark enough inside the car that I can't see my analogue clocks my lights go on.
There's a related issue of DRLs washing out turn indicators. I know they're rarely used anyway on Audis but recent models have the orange indicator LEDs sandwiched between two rows of white DRLs (because styling) which makes them difficult to spot. Some manufacturers (Volvo definitely) have countered this by disabling the DRL temporarily whilst the turn indicator is flashing.
Both fine examples of unintended consequences.
TBH in built up areas (at night) you should only ever drive with side lights, anything else is too much, as always a lighting war ensues and we have ridiculously bright motorvehicle lights. Weve already seen that DRLs are an utter failure and haven't improved safety one iota.
Where have we seen this utter failure specifically relating to DRLs? Please provide evidence, I would love to read it.
One of the first lessons I learnt as a motorcyclist was to make yourself visible through road positioning and use of lights. It is self preservation pure and simple and I use similar principles as s cyclist.
Evidence it works?
Answer to the Q, NO, NO, Thrice NO.
Slippery slope that we've already seen with other BS 'safety' features.
Putting the onus on the vulnerable DOES NOT WORK ... EVER!
Surely the article refers to a paper that provides exactly that evidence?
I have evidence - a man stopped his car in front of me recently and said "without those lights on your helmet I would have run you over and killed you".
Case closed!
Actually the link is only to an abstract. A fairly cursory glance at which shows that although the authors draws an inference of a 19% reduction in accidents due to running lights the basis for doing so is rather deeply flawed. The number of accidents were quite low so drawing statistical inferences from it is dodgy in the first place, but the biggest flaw is that there was no attempt to establish or identify a causal link between daytime lights and the accident rate. To establish a causal link would require examination of the circumstances of each accident and for each case to establish whether lights or absence were a contributing factor. Whilst that might well be impractical without it the study really doesn't provide any evidence.
It is a real bugbear of mine that the word "evidence" is so widely misused when discussing cycling safety - especially on line.
I have lights on front and rear, in the day and dark. It makes me more visible. I also use pedal reflectors. My choice. Happy cycling all !
I own a bike with a dynamo and lights that are always on and the most infuriating thing is the number of people - pedestrians and even other road users - who feel I ought to be told that my lights are on... thats closely followed by the even more annoying gits who need to tell me that I left my bicycle lights on and, when I tell them, don't worry they will go off all by themselves in 2 to 3 minutes they act like I am talking about some strange alien technology... whoever heard of lights that go off by themselves... whoever heard of making your own electricity by pedeling... burn the witch :.)
My dyno lights have a daylight mode. Since riding with them (early September) I've had two right-turning SMIDSYs.
There is undoubtedly an arms race out there, some of the latest generation car lights are painfully bright - I think in part its that they're a very cold blue. As a driver I find them quite dazzling and at twilight I think there's a risk that you won't be spotted on a bike if you're not running lights.
The whole debate is moot for me as my dyno lights are always on and half my commute is on unlit roads so I have to have good lights.
I use them but even with a bright top and bright lights motorists don't see me. They just aren't looking.
For the ones that do then I'm sure lights make me stand out better. In an ideal world we wouldn't need them but it's not an ideal world. I'm not going to put my life at extra risk by not using lights just to prove a point.
I made up a runaround bike for the lady of the house from a frame i was given,i bought some wheels from Germany with a dynamo hub and B&M lights with the senso setting,She leaves them on all the time
and i've got to say mainly from looking over my shoulder to see where she is,They are certainly attention grabbing from quite a distance.(i don't mean that to sound harsh but she doesn't cycle that much).
Very much depends on riding conditions, but a good hi-viz would seem a better bet in my experience.
Obviously if you don't like riding in hi-viz (saw a really effective pink gilet or jersey in the Lakes yesterday) then lights are a good option. But only decent ones, set up right.
Personally I have always ridden with a rear light on and in certain places/scenarios with my front light also but that is my personal choice. It also hasn't stopped all of the fucktards close passing, left turning across me, right turning across me or any other chopper type activity but hopefully it has lessened it. Making it law I'm certainly not in favour of as it smacks of victim blaming again or a technicality for the odious insurance companies to wriggle out of paying out.
I'd say a maybe in the UK on the rear mainly.....in wet or low light...otherwise a huge NO.... in the EU.... you have no need to... the drivers are not self entitled in my experience
So we've got helmets, we've got hi-viz, and now we're moving towards a situation where largely redundant, irritating, expensive lights with unproven safety benefits are becoming a "must-have" accessory. If I was to set out to deliberately pare cycling back to a hard core of well-to-do middle-aged, overwhelmingly male enthusiasts, I couldn't think of a better way to do it.
No daytime running lights.
Other obstacles that drivers must avoid are not equipped with lights, why should bikes be any different? We need to put lights on pedestrians, traffic furniture, animals, trees, trash bins, etc. if we are going to go this route.
I feel that once again this puts all the burden on cyclists, and none on drivers, who need to pay attention.
Or perhaps I shouls just accept that drivers are NEVER going to pay attention, and get lights.
What to do?
I understand the sentiment, but Volvo's run permanently with their sidelights on. I always drive with the sidelights on in my car (which I actively have to do because it's not a Volvo).
I guess it's down to where you draw the line between principle (we shouldn't have to do this) and personal responsibility (I think this will benefit me so I'll do it).
Volvos run with side lights on because they are designed and built in Scandinavia, where they have much less daylight than here.
Since acquiring a tiny Cateye rear light and Lezyne front light, I have started to carry them for bits where there is lots of tree cover and hence shade, or long tunnels, or I get back later than intended, but I don't have them on all the time.
I drive with dipped headlights, because sidelights during the day (or in mist) are a waste of time: they don't show up. You see the outline of the car before you see the lights! Cars without lights are a pain. Often I have been waiting to turn into a main road, see a car coming and think there's time to pull out, only to realise at the last moment that there is another, closer vehicle without lights that I didn't see straight away. Or I am passing a lot of parked cars and only realise when it's too late that I should have given way to a vehicle coming the other way, but as it had no lights it just looked like another parked car. (You can tell by the annoyed look on the driver's face as you pass.)
On balance I think it is probably a good thing that new cars have running lights and it would be better if all cars were required to show high intensity lights now, as those without any can be obscured by those that do. You can argue that the lights cause a problem that didn't previously exist -- they distract and claim attention when you should be noticing all vehicles -- but really the problem is the inconsistency, and at least lights help to distinguish moving from parked vehicles.
But it isn't particularly good news for cyclists. I figure that if I sometimes don't immediately see cars without lights, what chance do cyclists have? It does mean that cyclists have to keep up or risk not being noticed, so I cycle with flashing lights in the day. Perhaps sad, but it's today's reality. Now, if we had proper segregated facilities like in Holland, it wouldn't be a problem.
Its not just Volvo's. Daylight running lights have been a legal requirement for brand new cars since Feb 2011 !
Well, as I'm not a tree or a lamp post, and I'm able to make a rational choice - in this case a choice to make being hit as difficult as possible for a inattentive drivers - I'm running flashing lights all day long.
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