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Traffic Management Orders (TMOs)

Overview

You’ll need to apply for a licence for a Temporary Traffic Order (TMO) if a road needs to be closed for work such as:

  • streetworks
  • construction

Not all on-street restrictions require a TMO, for example:

  • box junctions
  • road humps
  • pedestrian crossings

What TMOs do

TMOs are legal documents that help manage roads, traffic or parking. They set out restrictions that control things like speed limits, one-way streets and yellow lines.

There are two kinds of restriction:

  • parking and loading restrictions or 'static restrictions'
  • speed and movement restrictions or 'moving restrictions' 

Experimental and permanent orders

An experimental order lasts no longer than 18 months before they're either:

  • allowed to lapse
  • amended or made permanent

Permanent orders apply to most signs and lines that are placed on streets, such as:

  • single/double yellow lines
  • parking places
  • prohibited and compulsory turns
  • one-way traffic working 
  • speed limits

Who needs to be consulted

To set up a TMO we must consult with:

  • police
  • the ambulance service
  • the fire brigade
  • bus operators
  • the road haulage association
  • the freight transport association

We’ll contact other groups affected by a TMO, for example, cycling and disability groups.

Where we advertise TMOs

We have to publish a ‘notice’ to advertise TMOs and their impact in the London Gazette

In most cases, the notices are also published in a local newspaper. 

We sometimes put up printed notices: 

  • on-site
  • on affected roads
  • in other places affected by the orders