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Tag Archive for: AB 43

What is the 85th Percentile Rule?

June 23, 2025/by Jared Sanchez

And why it belongs in the dustbin of transportation history.

In 2021, CalBike helped pass the Slower Speeds Save Lives Bill, AB 43, authored by former California Assemblymember (and current U.S. Representative) Laura Friedman. The bill gives communities limited relief from the 85th percentile rule, allowing them more leeway to lower speed limits. This year, CalBike supports AB 1014 (Rogers), which will extend the ability to set lower speed limits on state-controlled roadways. CalBike’s Executive Director, Kendra Ramsey, is testifying in support of AB 1014 at the Senate Transportation Committee.

The history of the 85th percentile rule

When a local government wants to lower the speed limit on a particular street, it has to do a speed study to determine how fast drivers are going on that street. Under the 85th percentile rule, the new speed limit must be set within 5 mph of the speed that 85% of drivers travel at or below. 

As with most things that are no longer working well, the 85th percentile rule for setting speed limits arose to serve a genuine need. In rural areas, towns would sometimes set speed traps, lowering the speed limits within town boundaries much lower than those of the surrounding area. Towns raised revenue by handing out speeding tickets to unsuspecting motorists.

The 85th percentile rule was never designed to determine safe speeds in urban areas, yet it is now widely applied for that purpose.

There has been a concerted effort across the country to change the way speed limits are set.

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO), and more recently, the California State Transportation Agency (CalSTA) have all called for moving away from using the 85th percentile as the basis for setting speed limits.

In 2018, former Assemblymember Friedman initiated a bill to revise the ingrained 85th percentile rule, which was eventually transformed into the Zero Traffic Fatalities Task Force, in which the body firmly focused on the rule. This led to the passage of AB 43 in 2021. 

How does the 85th percentile rule work?

The 85th percentile rule is easiest to explain with an example. If the current speed limit on a street is 35 mph and a speed study shows that 85% of drivers are driving at or below 37 mph, the 85th percentile rule would dictate that the speed limit remain unchanged because it fits driver behavior. Even if the community had determined that 35 mph was too fast for safety, the local government’s hands would be tied.

In some cases, the rule leads to higher speed limits. For example, if the speed study showed that 85% of drivers in that 35 mph zone were going 41 mph or slower, the local government would have to raise the speed limit to 40 mph.

What AB 43 did to speed limits

Under AB 43, communities can reduce speeds in business zones without a speed study. In cases where a speed study is still required, California jurisdictions have more flexibility to lower speed limits. San Francisco has helpful resources on this topic.

For example, if a speed study showed that 85% of drivers traveled up to 34 mph in a 35 mph zone, under the old rule, the city would need to keep the posted speed at 35 mph. Under AB 43, the city has the option to round down and reduce the speed limit to 30 mph.

In addition, communities can reduce speeds by another 5 mph after an engineering study in areas with high volumes of bike or pedestrian traffic or in areas that are designated as safety corridors.

Why California needs lower speed limits on state routes

Speed is a factor in at least 25% of traffic fatalities in California. Even at the relatively low speeds in urban areas, collisions can be fatal, particularly for seniors and children. As the cars, trucks, and SUVs on the road have gotten heavier and their grilles higher, injuries to vulnerable road users hit by cars, even at slow speeds, are more likely to be life-threatening.

Some of the most dangerous streets in many California cities and towns are state routes. These local highways turn into city streets while still funneling fast-moving traffic past homes and schools. AB 1014 would extend the same speed limit setting parameters to these state routes. Caltrans would be empowered to set prima facie speed limits of 25 or 20 mph in certain areas. It would also have the option to round down instead of up from the 85th percentile speed and to reduce speeds by another 5 mph in safety corridors and near facilities used by people biking and walking.

Of course, speed limits can’t prevent all reckless and dangerous driving. We need improved infrastructure for that. But measures like AB 43 and AB 1014 are an excellent start and may provide an impetus for better infrastructure if speed safety targets aren’t met.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/speed-cars-traffic-blur-scaled.jpg 1707 2560 Jared Sanchez https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Jared Sanchez2025-06-23 16:43:522025-06-23 16:43:53What is the 85th Percentile Rule?

Assemblymember Friedman tweaks speed limit laws to save lives

August 5, 2021/by Kevin Claxton

A bicycle commuter and Assemblymember from Pasadena, Laura Friedman, is fighting hard to defend her proposals to give local officials more power to set lower speed limits where doing so will save lives. CalBike strongly supports all measures that reduce the speeds of automobiles wherever people walk and bike. We need you to support Friedman’s proposals in AB 43.

Speed kills but speed limits keep rising  

Even though speed is the top risk factor in pedestrian fatalities in California, our rules about setting speed limits are designed to reward speeding. To set a speed limit, current regulations require local officials to measure the speed of existing drivers and set the limit at the closest 5 mph increment to the 85th percentile speed. This means that the speed of the driver who is going faster than 85 out of 100 drivers on the road determines the speed limit. 

As cars get bigger and more powerful and safer — for their occupants but nobody else — people drive faster. Local officials are often forced to raise speed limits when they measure existing conditions. In other words, speeding drivers set speed limits.

AB 43 makes small changes to the rules about setting speed limits that will lead to significant changes in the lives of Californians whose families won’t have to mourn the violent death of a loved one hit by a car. 

Primary elements of AB 43:

  • It allows local agencies to reduce the speed limit on designated “high injury corridor streets” to 5 mph below what would otherwise be required. 
  • It extends the time that an agency can maintain a speed limit before being forced to raise it from 10 years to 14 years. 
  • It reduces the absolute minimum speed limit in certain narrowly defined commercial districts from 25 mph to 20 mph or 15 mph. 
  • It allows local agencies to consider the safety of people walking and biking when they set speed limits. 

Together, these changes represent the biggest challenge to the 85th percentile rule since its establishment. 

The origins of the 85th percentile rule

If you’ve driven in rural areas, you’ve probably seen speed limits go down as you approach a small town, even though the roadway hasn’t changed. In the past, towns would deliberately set lower speed limits to generate revenue from out-of-town motorists. The town sheriff or police officer would set up a speed trap and hand out tickets.

Legislators outlawed such speed traps and instead required that speed limits be set at a “more reasonable” speed. On the assumption that most motorists don’t exceed a safe speed, they defined “most” as 85%. 

However, over time, most drivers have come to consider it practically a civil right to drive as fast as the road will safely allow. This sense of entitlement has stymied earlier efforts to change the 85th percentile rule, which makes the tweaks in Friedman’s AB 43 an impressive policy effort. 

How AB 43 changes the 85th percentile rule

Let’s take the example of a 4-lane arterial that passes by senior centers and playgrounds and has bike lanes. The speed limit is 35 mph. To enforce that speed limit, local officials have to update their measurement of actual speeds every five or seven years. 

If they find that 85% of drivers are going at least 43 mph, they have to raise the speed limit to 45 mph, because that is the closest 5 mph speed increment to the 85th percentile of drivers. If some exceptions apply, a local agency may round down instead of rounding to the closest 5 mph increment, so they might be able to set the speed limit at 40 mph. 

In this scenario, 40 mph is still an increase over the current speed limit and way too fast for safety, considering the uses of this street. If this road is on a city’s “high injury corridor,” AB 43 will allow local officials to reduce the speed limit by an additional 5 mph. In this case, that would keep the speed limit unchanged. 

This will save lives in Los Angeles, where officials very reluctantly had to raise speed limits on hundreds of miles of arterials, thanks to the 85th percentile rule. AB 43 will allow them to reverse that deadly change. 

AB 43 won’t solve all our problems with speeding motorists, but it is a significant step in the right direction. If you agree, please sign our petition to show your support.

What California needs to create truly safe streets

So how do we solve the problem of roads built to prioritize fast cars? The best answer is better street design to limit speed. Features such as protected bike lanes, bulb-outs, chicanes, and speed humps can create slow-speed streets that are friendlier and safer for people on bikes and walking. 

When repaving, cities should add these features. But we can’t wait decades to rebuild our streets, which is why CalBike created a Quick-Build Guide to help planners design the changes we need now and implement them in months rather than years.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/speeding_cam.jpg 626 1200 Kevin Claxton https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Kevin Claxton2021-08-05 19:06:002021-08-05 19:06:02Assemblymember Friedman tweaks speed limit laws to save lives

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