North Dakota permits right turns on red after a full stop, with no major 2026 updates altering the core rule. Drivers must yield to pedestrians and traffic, prohibiting turns where signs ban them or safety demands otherwise.
Rule Basics
Under NDCC § 39-10-05(3)(c), vehicles facing steady red may “cautiously enter the intersection to turn right… after stopping,” yielding right-of-way to crosswalk pedestrians and intersection traffic. Full stop required at marked line, crosswalk, or entry point. Left-on-red allowed only one-way to one-way streets.
Procedure Steps
- Complete stop before line/crosswalk/intersection.
- Check right, crosswalk, and intersection for peds/vehicles.
- Proceed cautiously if clear—no sign prohibition.
- Yield always; “cautious” means slow, ready to stop.​
Exceptions and Bans
- Signs (“No Right Turn on Red”) override—obey strictly.
- School zones, construction, or pedestrian-heavy areas often posted.
- No statewide 2026 bans; urban pushes (e.g., Fargo) unpassed.
- Emergency vehicles exempt with lights/sirens (§ 39-10-03).
2026 Updates
No changes in 2026 legislative session or NDDOT manuals; rule stable since 1970s energy conservation push. National trends banning RTOR (e.g., DC 2025) not adopted; ND emphasizes vigilance amid rising ped crashes (up 15% 2020-25). Roundabout signaling tightened (2023), unrelated.​
Penalties
Illegal RTOR: 2 points, $20–$100 fine (class B misdemeanor max $1,000/30 days). Failure-to-yield adds $50+. Accumulate 10 points? License suspension. Court dismissals via safety course possible.​
Safety Emphasis
RTOR cuts idling/emissions but spikes ped/bike conflicts (20% urban turns). Scan mirrors/crosswalks twice; winter ice demands extra caution. Apps like Waze flag bans. NDDOT urges no phone use during check.
SOURCES:
- https://ndlegis.gov/cencode/t39c10.pdf
- https://www.drivinglaws.org/resources/north-dakota-red-light-stop-sign-tickets.html












