Home » How Long Can You Drive Around A Roundabout Without Getting Arrested?

How Long Can You Drive Around A Roundabout Without Getting Arrested?

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The roundabout, also known as the traffic circle, is a popular road device for controlling traffic. It doesn’t appear so much in the United States, but there are a few about. Like in Texas, where one young driver decided to see how long he could drive around one without stopping.

Today, I spoke to a young man behind the Twitter account DFWStormChasers. Late last week, he drew plenty of attention by asking a simple question. “How long can you drive in a roundabout before you get the cops called on you?” he mused. But he didn’t just ask the question—he actually went and found out.

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At this point I’ll say I don’t condone this kind of behavior. At the same time, it’s a question that demanded and answer. So how long can you get away with this? As it turns out—a damn sight longer than you might think. Don’t try this at home.

Spin Me Right Round

We don’t have the kind of fully-certified timing that you might get with a Nürburgring record. What we do have is a dashcam video with a time stamp. On his first attempt, this young driver who shall remain nameless headed out in his truck and managed to loop a roundabout in Arlington, Texas for over 20 minutes until he was stopped. “Someone was angry at me the first time and called [the] police department,” he told me. “I left before anything happened.”

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Of course, it didn’t stop there. The video quickly racked up likes on Twitter, with DFWStormChasers laying down the gauntlet. The challenge was simple—10,000 likes, and he’d try for an hour. The video soared to over 150,000 likes, so he drove out and went for it again.

The second time around, he says he made it a full 50 minutes until the police showed up and pulled him over. By the sounds of things, they were less than pleased. “The second time at least three people called [the police],” he explains. “Cops threatened me with disturbing the peace, being a public nuisance, speeding, disrupting [the] flow of traffic, and felony reckless driving.” Quite the potential rap sheet, though apparently the only actual charge laid was a speeding offense for going three miles per hour over the speed limit. Beyond that, the police also had another punishment in mind. “The cops made me call my dad and said all of those things to him, trying to get me in trouble,” the young driver explained.

Arlington police were apparently eager to discourage this activity in future. “I only attempted twice, as the City of Arlington apparently ‘has me on file’ if I get caught doing it again,” the driver told me. “I really want to, but as I’m only 17, getting into a court battle with the police department over being silly is not on my to-do list.” That sounds like a sane choice—judges rarely look kindly upon people that intentionally go out of their way to cause problems.

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The video of the second attempt racked up a further 88,000 likes on Twitter. Through the social media site’s Premium program, the driver is hoping to make some money back on his short lived notoriety. 

Is this specifically a crime? I couldn’t find anything specific in Texas legislation about intentionally looping a roundabout over and over again. I have reached out to TxDOT for more information and will update this article accordingly.

Ultimately, it’s possible to argue about this, but regardless—police can always find something to charge you with in a case like this. In any case, 50 minutes is a big achievement in what is, fundamentally, a disruptive pastime that should not be encouraged. The record isn’t official by any means, because nobody tracks these things and the early part of the video is corrupted. Still, that’s the number we have to go on.

This has Happened Before

Would you believe that there is nothing new under the sun? I did some further research, and found out that this question has been asked previously. Australian outlet Drive.com.au reported on the matter earlier this year after a Twitter post from American comedian Tommy Bayer drew some serious attention online.

Tommy didn’t have the answer, but that led me to the exploits of another comedian—one Dave Dugan, of Carmel, Indiana. As covered by WTHR in 2022, Dugan drove a full 1,001 laps around the Jackson Circle on Horseferry Road, which took him 4 hours and 29 minutes. He was allegedly trying to beat an Australian record of 4 hours and 52 seconds, which he did so quite handily. Dugan claimed this was a world record, and had undertaken the feat to raise money for the Cancer Support Community charity.

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Doing this is not exactly dangerous, whether you’re doing it for 50 minutes or well over four hours. Still, it is a great way to piss off other drivers and make enemies in your neighborhood. This young teenage driver has shown us how long you can get away with this for, and that should answer all of our questions. Now we know, this silly pastime should end here, for all our sakes.

Image credit: Chuttersnap via Unsplash license

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Goblin
Goblin
26 minutes ago

I think I’ve never been in a roundabout where doing this for more than a few laps wouldn’t cause oil starvation to the engine, but we’re probably all different and drive different.

Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
2 hours ago

I drive through 8(eight!) roundabouts on my 14 mile commute to work, several are fairly good sized but not really near houses or anything to draw attention so I could probably cruise around them for a good while without anybody hassling.

I do think they’re good for like if you’re headed somewhere with a group in another car and want to switch so they get to the driveway first you do an extra lap so they pass you, or if you think you’re being followed just do a couple laps. Also seen big slow trucks take an extra lap to let traffic behind them clear, they can be fairly handy.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
3 hours ago

The fact that the police have the time to go after someone for doing something harmless suggest to me that there are too many police officers there with not enough to do.

And that also suggests to me that maybe less money should go to police and more money to other things… like schools.

Dodsworth
Dodsworth
3 hours ago

I tried this several years ago. After about three laps I felt stupid and moved on with my boring life.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
3 hours ago
Reply to  Dodsworth

But did you have Twitter/X and a bunch of people cheering you on with ‘likes’?

Theotherotter
Theotherotter
3 hours ago

Yikes. I could do this exactly twice before I started getting dizzy. Just reading about it gives me a headache.

VanGuy
VanGuy
16 minutes ago
Reply to  Theotherotter

I feel like this really depends on the radius though?

The Arc de Triomphe is a roundabout, isn’t it?

Kevin Rhodes
Kevin Rhodes
4 hours ago

There are four roundabouts over the course of a about a mile and a half on a road near me. I know the racing line through all of them in both directions. Can’t say I have done laps of them though.

Wezel Boy
Wezel Boy
2 hours ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

Some people call them roundabouts. I call them chicanes.

Nick Fortes
Nick Fortes
5 hours ago

I’d say you can do it infinitely, I can drive around my block until I run out of gas I don’t think anyone would notice or even call the police, granted it is Philadelphia, the police wouldn’t even entertain the call of someone complaining about that.

Who are these people who notice a person driving around a roundabout? They themselves would have to be at the roundabout for quite a time to see someone even go around more than once and then to think they are doing something nefarious at 5mph instead of being lost and going around once. Its sheer nosiness at that point. Drifting around the roundabout? Yes call the police after an initial applause, but just driving? Please go away and go about your day.

RustyBritmobile
RustyBritmobile
5 hours ago

The dude is in trouble because he’s going the wrong way around the roundabout! Look at the entrance/exit lane arrows. Clearly Aussie. Then look at the direction of driving – straight outta the USofA. Surprised he didn’t head-on some poor bloke. (Also, I think the car pictured is driving clockwise).

JP15
JP15
5 hours ago

I don’t it, was it neighbors that live next to the roundabout that sat there and watched him? I see other cars in a roundabout for all of the 10 seconds it takes for me to drive through and I never see those cars again.

If you’re just circling around going the speed limit (not bouncing off the rev limiter with a full opposite lock drift the whole time), how would anyone even know you’d been there a while?

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