Side-by-side comparison

Romania vs Slovenia driving rules

Compare the main cross-border differences before driving between Romania and Slovenia.

Rule Romania Slovenia
Built-up areas50 km/h10 / 20 / 30 / 50 km/h
Outside built-up areas90 / 100 km/h90 km/h
Motorways / expressways130 km/h110 / 130 km/h
Standard drivers0.0 mg/ml≈ 0.5 mg/ml
Novice drivers0.0 mg/ml0.0 mg/ml
Professional drivers0.0 mg/ml0.0 mg/ml
Daytime lightsMandatory on selected roadsMandatory all day
Winter tyres / equipmentMandatory in winter road conditionsMandatory on specified dates or when winter conditions apply
Mandatory equipmentwarning triangle, fire extinguisher, reflective vestwarning triangle, first-aid kit, spare bulbs, reflective vest
Low-emission zonesCheck the current national or local official sourceCheck the current national or local official source
Fines and enforcementCheck the current national or local official sourceCheck the current national or local official source
Emergency number112112

Romania

Daytime lights: Mandatory on national roads, motorways and expressways.

Winter tyres / equipment: Mandatory on snowy and icy roads.

Mandatory equipment: The source limits the reflective-vest requirement to vehicles over 3.5 t.

Slovenia

Typical passenger-car speed limits: Urban alternatives cover traffic-calmed, common-traffic and limited-speed zones; the source lists 110 km/h for expressways and 130 km/h for motorways.

Blood alcohol limits: The official source states 0.5 g/kg of blood; the displayed mg/ml value is an approximate normalization.

Winter tyres / equipment: From 15 November to 15 March and outside those dates during wintry conditions.

This is a planning summary, not legal advice. Road signs and current national rules take priority. Always check the linked official source before departure.