Car Lights in Sweden – Headlights, Fog Lamps, Hazard Lights & Dashboard Indicators Explained

Published by KorkortTest4u.se • Updated Oct 2025

Using the right lights at the right time is a major part of safe driving in Sweden — and a frequent topic on the theory test. This guide explains each light on a modern car in plain English, when to switch them on, which combinations are not allowed, and how to recognise the dashboard symbols and switch icons you’ll see in the car.

How to read this page: We move from daytime visibility (DRL) to evening/night (dipped and high beam), then poor-weather tools (front/rear fog), plus parking and hazard lights. Watch for the prohibited combinations list near the end.

1) Daytime Running Lights (DRL)

Most newer cars switch on daytime running lights automatically when you start driving in daylight. DRL makes you visible — it does not light up the road. In clear daytime conditions you can drive with DRL alone. When the light fades or visibility drops (rain, dusk, tunnels), swap to dipped beam.

Car with daytime running lights in daylight

2) Dipped Beam (Low Beam / Halvljus)

Dipped beam is the standard night-time light and your go-to choice whenever visibility is reduced. Use it at dusk and dawn, during rain or snow, and always in tunnels — even in daytime.

Headlight switch set to low beam

3) Parking Lights (Positionsljus / Sidelights)

Parking lights are small front/rear position lamps that help others see your vehicle when it’s stationary. They are not a driving light — they don’t illuminate the road.

Example of parking/position lights on a car

4) Front Fog Lamps (Dimljus fram)

Front fog lamps produce a wide, low beam that sits under the fog and reduces glare. Use them when visibility is significantly reduced by fog or heavy rain/snow. In daytime poor-weather conditions, you may use front fogs instead of dipped beam. Don’t stack them with other forward lights.

Switch with front fog light active

5) Rear Fog Lamp (Bakre dimljus)

The rear fog lamp is a very bright red light that helps drivers behind you see your car in extremely poor visibility (thick fog or spray). Because it’s powerful, switch it off as soon as conditions improve — otherwise you’ll dazzle traffic behind.

Dashboard indicator for rear fog lamp

6) Full Beam (High Beam / Helljus)

Full beam is for dark, unlit roads when you need maximum range. Dip your lights for oncoming vehicles, when following another vehicle closely, or when street-lighting is sufficient. If in doubt, flick back to dipped and re-assess.

7) Hazard Warning Lights (Varningsblinkers)

Hazard lights flash all indicators at once. They’re a warning signal — not a courtesy or “thank you” light.

Hazard warning light button illuminated

8) Dashboard & Switch Icons You Should Recognise

These are the common symbols tied to the light functions above. They appear on your instrument cluster or on the light switch itself.

IconMeaning
Low beam indicator (green) Dipped beam is on.
High beam indicator (blue) Full beam is on — dip for oncoming/following traffic.
Front fog light indicator (green) Front fog lamps active (use only in poor visibility).
Rear fog indicator (amber) Rear fog lamp active — switch off as soon as you can see behind clearly.
Bulb failure indicator (yellow) Bulb fault detected — check exterior lights.

9) Allowed vs. Prohibited Light Combinations

Many theory questions boil down to combinations. Memorise these to pick up easy marks.

CombinationAllowed?Why
DRL + Dipped beamNoThey serve the same front purpose — don’t stack.
DRL + Front fog lampsNoIllegal pairing; switch to dipped if you need more light.
Dipped beam + Front fog lampsNoToo bright together; use one or the other as conditions demand.
Dipped beam + Parking lightsYesParking lights act as position lamps alongside dipped.
Rear fog lamp + Normal tail lightsOnly in very poor visibilityTurn rear fog off when conditions improve.

10) Pulling Over: Which Lights Should You Use?

Normal pullover (not an emergency): Use dipped beam if it’s dark/poor visibility; parking lights will usually remain on. No hazard lights unless you are a danger.

Emergency pullover/breakdown: Turn on hazard lights; keep parking or dipped beam on in the dark. Do not use fog lights or full beam. Place a warning triangle outside built-up areas.

11) Visibility in Darkness (Typical Exam Values)

How far you can see (and be seen) at night depends on clothing and reflectors. These approximate distances are commonly used in theory questions:

Clothing & ConditionsWith Dipped BeamWith Full Beam
Dark clothing, no reflector≈ 25 m≈ 150 m
Light clothing, no reflector≈ 60 m≈ 300 m
With reflector≈ 125 m≈ 450 m

12) Police & Emergency Vehicle Lights

Emergency and police vehicles in Sweden use special light combinations and messages to warn, request passage, or instruct you to stop. Understanding these signals is crucial — both for safety and for the driving theory test.

Swedish police car with blue and red lights
Light CombinationMeaningYour Action
Blue flashing lightsEmergency vehicle approachingMove aside, let it pass
Blue + red lightsPolice order to stopPull over and stop safely
STOP POLIS signOfficial stop commandPull over, turn off engine, wait
Amber/yellow lightsMaintenance or cautionSlow down, proceed carefully
Rear red lightsEscort “do not pass”Stay behind

Summary

Ready to practise? Try: Traffic Rules · Weather & Road Conditions · Eco-Driving