19 December 2025

BEST OF 2025: Some people are strictly 'reverse parking only' ... Why?

| By Hayley Nicholls
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cars in a carpark

After critical analysis, Hayley Nicholls asks: Is it time to back out of this argument?

Year in Review: About Regional is revisiting some of the best Opinion articles of 2025. Here’s what got you talking, got you angry and got you thinking. Today, Hayley Nicholls ponders our varying approaches to parking.

My husband reverses into car parks. He is that guy.

The time-honoured adage of ‘opposites attract’ typically rings true in my marriage, and indeed, this case is no different.

Personally, I avoid reversing. I’m the driver hovering nearby, eyes narrowing with growing impatience, watching the guy reversing into a carpark and thinking, ‘But why though?’

Drive in and reverse out; or reverse in and drive out? Potato, potah-to.

I’ve never really understood the difference.

I assumed it was a personal preference, based on whether you’d rather do something annoying now or later. One of life’s telling little scenarios that separates those living for the moment from the forward planners. A tortoise-and-the-hare situation, or a real-life Myers-Briggs test.

You might be an INFP, but choices like this reveal whether you’re more YOLO! or SWOT (analysis).

However, this choice is not always ours.

I have a work colleague who hails from Young, one of many regional towns whose main street is bordered on either side by diagonal parking bays, signposted ‘Reverse Parking Only’.

Loyal to the ways of his people, my Young friend insists reverse parking “just makes sense!”

“It improves traffic flow! People have a clear view when they’re pulling out, so they can leave quickly – instead of looking behind them to try to hustle their way in.”

Fair play. That’s a point to Team Reverse Parking.

But hang on. Don’t you hold up traffic initially, as you literally stop your vehicle in the middle of the road before slowly inching backwards into place?

If minimising congestion is the goal, surely we miss no matter the angle we choose to shoot from.

Also, when reversing out of a carpark, you can usually wait for a natural gap in traffic to limit the impact on others.

Back on Main Street in Young, signage removes this choice and insists on reverse parking.

If signposts are getting involved, there must be logic here. As we know, the government would never invest in something that doesn’t make sense.

Reversing between stationary objects is clearly a safer option than backing up into a heavily trafficked thoroughfare.

Busy thoroughfare or quiet back street – one environment is static, the other is unpredictable and higher risk overall.

Okay, okay. Point Two, Team Reverse Parking.

In more qualitative commentary online, it’s said that drivers tend to arrive at their destination fresher and more alert, making it a safer time for such driving manoeuvres. Upon leaving, drivers are more likely to be fatigued or harried.

I cast my mind back and search my own experience.

I recall, in the exuberance of youth, being so late on my lunch break that I violently swung the nose of my car straight into an unforgiving concrete bollard.

Visions emerge of myself just last week, taking deep breaths after grocery shopping with the children, reversing into the busy carpark to the soothing sounds of a motor-mouthed 7-year-old asking me to unwrap a Chupa Chups, revealing she is busting for a wee, and also “?Can you put on K-pop Demon Hunters?”

Three-Nil, Team Reverse Parking.

READ ALSO What's the weather going to be like on Christmas Day?

It might be time for me to back out of this argument, before I lose more than the crumpled bumper of my long-suffering Hyundai Excel.

It seems – hasty as my parking style – I may have been too quick to dismiss reverse parking people. Although obviously, I will never tell my husband that.

But next time I find myself hunched over the steering wheel, waiting not-so-patiently, while some risk-averse forward-thinker reverses into their park, at least I’ll know why.

The real personality test is: will I change my own ways?

Original Article published by Hayley Nicholls on Region Canberra.

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Reverse parking is MUCH safer in an emergency situation. What if everyone was trying to back out into the only piece of road when we all needed to leave in a hurry? Chaos!!

That’s why many scout camps (and similar) insist on reverse parking in case of fire.

Andrew French3:03 pm 02 Dec 25

I do both depending on the situation but what I find funny is the people the reverse park but take 5 attempts to do it and hold up traffic for ages whilst doing it. Nose in parked in a busy car park can get out fairly quickly as someone always wants their spot so they stop and wait.

I ALWAYS reverse in as I can clearly see the rear and sides of my large car when reversing in to a spot, but nose in is scary guesswork, as I can’t see the front edges of my car.

Andrew Sullivan1:10 pm 02 Dec 25

There is another reason to reverse park that is not mentioned here .. manoeuvrability. A vehicle can navigate obstacles better in reverse. The radius of turn is smaller. That’s why it’s much easier to reverse into a parallel parking shoot than to drive into front first. Also, gave you ever noticed how a forklift is set up? That’s right, the rear wheels turn .. in other words they by default move in ‘reverse’, because it’s more effective to navigate right spaces. Sounds like parking right?
Andrew

I reverse into car parks for reasons you didn’t mention. My car is low at the front and I usually can’t poke its nose over wheel chocks without causing damage. But the rear of my car has no such problem. So backing in, I can move into the space much further. Secondly, if there’s a post, wall or other obstruction on one side and I have no passenger, I’ll move the left side of my car close to the obstruction, giving my car more clearance and others more space. This can require reversing in. Thirdly, a car can be manoeuvred more nimbly when reversing. And lastly, if you reverse a lot, you get really good at it!

cannedbeeria11:56 pm 04 Dec 25

I park front in. It’s quicker when pulling off a busy road. And, as explained in the article, when we reverse out we wait for a gap in the traffic flow, so no one is inconvenienced.
Also it means people on the foot paths are not smothered in exhaust… especially people on footpath coffee shops.
Some car parking places insist on nose in parking because of exhaust stains on walls.

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