Caution around blind spots and anticipating truck maneuvers are essential to ensuring everyone's safety
Truck drivers face significant challenges on the road due to their visibility limitations and the complex nature of their vehicles. Known for their extensive blind spots, truck drivers rely mainly on side mirrors to perceive their surroundings. The sheer length and cargo configuration further reduce their field of vision, creating areas where smaller vehicles can be completely hidden from the driver.
It’s crucial to recognize these factors when sharing the road with a truck. While truck drivers strive to stop in time, changing traffic conditions and the inertia of their cargo can limit their reaction capabilities. Depending on a semi-trailer’s ability to stop quickly poses considerable risk. Therefore, caution around blind spots and anticipating truck maneuvers are essential to ensuring everyone’s safety on the road.

Sharing the road safely with a truck
Blind spots for trucks are located in the following areas:
- Rear: extends approximately up to 20 to 25 car lengths.
- Front: distance of about 4 car lengths.
- Right side: along the trailer’s length and extends diagonally across three lanes.
- Left side: safest for passing and merging.
The weight of semi-trailers, which can reach 80,000 pounds when fully loaded, significantly affects their braking and handling capabilities. Under ideal conditions, a semi-trailer traveling at 65 mph needs about five to six seconds, roughly 525 feet, to come to a complete stop. This distance increases significantly on steep grades or in adverse weather conditions like rain. In comparison, an average civilian vehicle requires about 316 feet to stop completely, marking a significant 40% difference in braking distance compared to a truck.
Additionally, truck drivers are trained to maintain a distance of approximately 20 feet behind other vehicles at critical points such as traffic lights, railroad crossings, and stop signs, ensuring enough space to stop safely. However, due to their visibility limitations, especially around the cab area, drivers of other vehicles should be aware that they may not be visible to the truck driver in close situations.

It’s important to remember that if you can see the truck driver’s face in their side mirrors, they can see you too. This underscores the importance of maintaining a safe distance and avoiding abrupt maneuvers around trucks, as they cannot stop as quickly as many drivers might initially assume.

How Truck Drivers Can Protect Their Skin from UV Rays on the Road
Chronic exposure to UVA rays isn’t just about getting a tan—learn how to protect your skin from the sun’s rays while on the road.

Top Concerns of Fleet Managers in 2026
The J. J. Keller Center for Market Insights has completed its sixth annual study analyzing the key concerns facing fleet management.

How to survive inflation, the biggest challenge for a trucker’s finances
The latest statistics from the U.S. Department of Transportation reveal a challenging scenario, but one that’s not insurmountable. Everything is getting more expensive, including the intelligence of a good transporter.

Where Are Truck Drivers Most in Demand in the United States?
Texas, California, Florida, Illinois, and Georgia lead truck driver demand across the United States as the transportation industry faces a renewed shortage of professional drivers.

Oliver Tree & Gaspi: Tragedy That Highlights Air Traffic Logistics
The deaths of American musician Oliver Tree and Argentine content creator Gaspi in a helicopter collision over Rio de Janeiro have once again raised a critical question for the transportation industry: how to safely manage increasingly congested transportation networks, both in the air and on the ground.

How to Perform a Pre-Trip Inspection: A Guide for Truck Drivers
A pre-trip inspection is one of the most important procedures for any truck driver.
