Skip to main content
Menu

Truck Driving Bans in Estonia 2026

Estonia: no nationwide truck driving ban. Local and route restrictions may still apply, see below.

Estonia has no nationwide truck driving ban. Heavy goods vehicles may run on Sundays and public holidays without a general calendar restriction. The only time-based driving restriction applies to vehicles carrying placarded dangerous goods on the Tallinn-Tartu section of road 2 (E263) on working days during morning and evening peak hours. Public holidays still bring heavier traffic and longer border queues, but driving itself stays legal.

Calendar as an image

Download the current ban calendar as an image — for social media, your team chat or a printout in the cab.

Next 30 days

Estonia: no scheduled nationwide driving bans. Local and city restrictions are described below.

Public holidays with truck bans — Estonia 2026

DateHolidayBan timeScope
New Year's Day No general ban applies
Independence Day No general ban applies
Good Friday No general ban applies
Easter Sunday No general ban applies
Spring Day No general ban applies
Pentecost No general ban applies
Victory Day No general ban applies
Midsummer Day No general ban applies
Day of Restoration of Independence No general ban applies
Christmas Eve No general ban applies
Christmas Day No general ban applies
Boxing Day No general ban applies

No general truck ban

Estonia does not apply a nationwide weekend or public holiday driving ban for heavy goods vehicles. International freight may run on Sundays and on all public holidays without a general calendar restriction. Truck movement is shaped instead by local access rules posted on road signs, temporary roadworks measures, and congestion at border crossings rather than by a fixed national ban.

Dangerous goods (ADR) time restriction

One narrow driving restriction applies to dangerous goods transport. On road 2 (E263) Tallinn-Tartu-Võru-Luhamaa, on the Tallinn-Tartu section, vehicles carrying loads for which dangerous goods placarding is obligatory may not drive on working days from 07:00 to 09:00 and from 17:00 to 19:00. The restriction targets placarded ADR vehicles only and does not extend to ordinary freight.

Basic driving rules for trucks

Heavy goods vehicles are limited to 90 km/h outside built-up areas and 50 km/h in built-up areas. The blood alcohol limit is 0.2 grams per litre and applies to all drivers, including professional drivers. Dipped headlights or daytime running lights must be on at all times, day and night.

FAQ

Are trucks banned on Sundays in Estonia?

No. Estonia has no nationwide Sunday driving ban for trucks. Heavy goods vehicles may operate on Sundays like any other day.

Do public holidays stop truck traffic in Estonia?

No. There is no holiday driving ban. Trucks may drive on all 12 Estonian public holidays. Traffic is usually heavier and border queues longer, but driving stays legal.

Are there local truck restrictions in Estonian cities like Tallinn?

Local access, weight and parking limits are set by road signs in some city areas and on weight-restricted structures. Follow posted signage. Estonia has no citywide time ban comparable to the Sunday bans used in Germany or Poland.

Are there restrictions for dangerous goods (ADR) trucks?

Yes. Vehicles carrying loads for which dangerous goods placarding is obligatory are restricted on the Tallinn-Tartu section of road 2 (E263) on working days from 07:00 to 09:00 and from 17:00 to 19:00.

I transit Estonia towards Latvia or Russia. Do ban rules affect my plan?

No driving ban affects transit. The Narva-Ivangorod crossing to Russia has real queueing, but that is covered separately on this site.

Which basic road rules apply to trucks in Estonia?

Heavy goods vehicles are limited to 90 km/h outside built-up areas and 50 km/h in built-up areas. The blood alcohol limit is 0.2 grams per litre. Dipped headlights or daytime running lights are mandatory day and night.

Official source

Rules can change on short notice. Verify with the official sources above before dispatch.

Country

Trading Sundays: Estonia 2026 → Ukraine summer heat truck ban →