Motorcycling greetings explained

Motorcycling greetings can include several gestures made between motorcyclists on the road. Titles for this greeting include "Biker wave", "Motorcyclist wave", "Motorcycle wave" or just "The Wave." The greeting made can include a number of gestures including a nod, a pointed finger, palm-out V sign, palm-in fingers-down V sign, or an actual raised-hand wave.

Warnings

Motorcyclists may use specialized hand signals to both greet and warn oncoming riders:

Regional differences

The use of specific gestures may be culturally or regionally dependent. Some observers have commented that waving is common amongst riders in North America but uncommon in some European countries, like Germany.[1] French riders will stick their foot out when overtaking another motorcycle, and while lane splitting when a car facilitates it.[2] In Britain, vehicles drive on the left hand side of the road, and so bikers will most commonly give each other a nod, rather than releasing the throttle to wave, or waving with the clutch hand which would likely be difficult to see.

Notes and References

  1. Hough's More Proficient Motorcycling caveats the hand signals table with the comment "motorcyclists in North America will generally understand the following hand signals."
  2. https://www.bennetts.co.uk/bikesocial/news-and-views/features/travel/how-to-ride-a-motorcycle-in-france-2018 How to ride a motorcycle in France