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🛴 Mobility & Curb Rules/Bike Lane Rules

Bike Lane Rules: San Jose vs Santa Clara

How do bike lane rules rules compare between San Jose, CA and Santa Clara, CA?

San Jose and Santa Clara have similar restriction levels.

San Jose, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

San Jose's Better Bikeways San Jose program builds protected bike lanes downtown, while California Vehicle Code §21208 and SJMC Title 11 govern cyclist lane use, motor-vehicle blocking of bike lanes, and right-of-way at intersections and driveways.

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Santa Clara, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

Santa Clara County Roads and VTA (Valley Transportation Authority) jointly set bikeway design and operational rules across the county, applying Caltrans Highway Design Manual Chapter 1000 plus the VTA Countywide Bicycle Plan to all Class I, II, III, and IV facilities.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactSan JoseSanta Clara
State lawCVC §21208 and §21209-
Local programBetter Bikeways San Jose-
Protected lanesClass IV separated facilities-
Local codeSJMC Title 11 traffic-
City goalVision Zero traffic deaths-
Countywide planner-VTA Countywide Bicycle Plan
Maintainer-SCC Roads and Airports
Design standard-Caltrans HDM Chapter 1000
Bikeway classes-Class I, II, III, IV defined
E-bike law-AB-1909 (2023)

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

San Jose FAQ

Can I drive in a bike lane to turn right?

Yes, briefly. CVC §21717 allows entering a bike lane up to 200 feet before a right turn, after yielding to any cyclist already there. Driving in the lane longer is a citable violation.

Are e-bikes allowed in bike lanes?

Class 1 and Class 2 e-bikes (up to 20 mph, pedal-assist or throttle) are allowed in all San Jose bike lanes. Class 3 e-bikes (up to 28 mph) are restricted to streets and Class II/IV lanes only.

Santa Clara FAQ

Can I ride an e-bike in a county bike lane?

Class 1 and 2 e-bikes (pedal-assist or throttle, max 20 mph) are allowed on Class II and IV bike lanes. Class 3 (28 mph) is generally allowed on roadways and Class IV but excluded from many Class I multi-use paths.

Who do I report a damaged or missing bike-lane stripe to?

On county-maintained roads in unincorporated areas, report to SCC Roads and Airports Department. On city streets, contact the city public works office. VTA maintains a regional reporting tool for the bikeway network.

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