
Dagen H logo
'Dagen H' ('The H day') was the day,
3 September 1967, on which
traffic in
Sweden switched from
driving on the left-hand side of the road to the right. The 'H' stands for ''Högertrafik'', the
Swedish word for "right-hand traffic".
There were two major arguments for the change:
★ All Sweden's immediate neighbours drove on the right (including
Norway, with which Sweden has a long land border).
★ Most Swedes drove left-hand drive (LHD) vehicles. This led to many head-on collisions when passing on two-lane highways, which are common in Sweden because of its low population density and traffic levels.
Nonetheless, the change was widely unpopular, and had repeatedly been voted down over the previous forty years. In a 1955
referendum, 83 percent voted to keep driving on the left. In 1963, the
''Riksdag'' (the Swedish parliament) approved the changeover and established the 'Statens Högertrafikkomission (HTK)', or 'state right-hand traffic commission' to oversee it. It also began implementing a four–year education program, with the advice of
psychologists. This program included putting the Dagen H
logo on various commemorative items, including women's
underwear.

Dagen H underwear
As Dagen H neared, every
intersection was equipped with an extra set of poles and
traffic signals wrapped in black plastic. Workers roamed the streets early in the morning on Dagen H to remove the plastic. Similarly, a parallel set of lines were painted onto the roads with white paint, then covered with black tape. Before Dagen H, Swedish roads had used yellow lines.

Stockholm, shortly before 15:00 on Dagen H
On Dagen H, Sunday 3 September, all non-essential traffic was banned from the roads from 01:00 to 06:00. Any vehicles on the roads during that time had to follow special rules. All vehicles had to come to a complete stop at 04:45 and, after waiting five minutes, carefully change to the right-hand side of the road and then stop again before being allowed to proceed at 05:00. In
Stockholm and
Malmö, however, the ban was longer to allow work crews to reconfigure intersections: there it ran from 10:00 on Saturday until 15:00 on Sunday. Certain other towns also saw an extended ban: from 15:00 on Saturday until 15:00 on Sunday.
One-way streets presented unique problems. Bus stops had to be constructed on the other side of the street. Intersections had to be reshaped to allow traffic to merge.
Trams in
Stockholm were withdrawn and replaced by
buses, and over one thousand new buses were purchased with doors on the right-hand side. Some 8,000 older buses were retrofitted to provide doors on both sides, while
Gothenburg exported its RHD buses to
Pakistan and
Kenya. However, in
Gothenburg an extensive tram network is still operating.
All Swedish vehicles had to have their original left-traffic
headlamps
replaced with right-traffic units. One of the reasons the Riksdag pushed ahead with Dagen H despite public unpopularity was that most vehicles in Sweden at the time used inexpensive standardised round headlamps, but the trend towards more expensive model-specific headlamps had begun in Continental Europe and was expected to spread through most other parts of the world. Further delay in changeover from left to right traffic would have greatly increased the cost burden to vehicle owners.
On the Monday following Dagen H, there were 125 reported traffic accidents, compared with a range of 130 to 198 for previous Mondays. No fatal traffic accidents were attributed to the switch. However, many older people gave up driving rather than learn to cope with the new rule of the road. Experts had suggested that changing to driving on the right would reduce accidents, because drivers would have a better view of the road ahead. Indeed, fatal car-to-car and car-to-pedestrian accidents dropped sharply as a result. Some of the decrease was attributed to the fact that speed limits were lowered by 10 km/h for some time after the switch. However, the accident rate rose back to its original level within two years.
See also
★
Driving on the left or right
★
Switch to right hand traffic in Czechoslovakia
★
Transportation in Sweden
References
★
H-Day Is Coming In Sweden Paul Friedlanders
★
When Voice Becomes Data Scott Berinato