Quick Answer
An advanced overtaking positioning course teaches you to use your bike’s lane position to see further, signal intent, and create a safe escape route before you even twist the throttle. It’s not about speed, but about setting up the pass 3-5 seconds before you initiate it. At Throttle Angels, this is a core module in our Level 2 training, taking about 4 hours of focused drills to build the muscle memory.
I was watching a rider on the Bangalore-Hyderabad highway last week. He was stuck behind a truck for kilometers.
Every time he tried to overtake, he’d pull out from directly behind it, see oncoming traffic, and duck back in. He was reacting, not planning. His body language screamed frustration, and each attempt was more desperate than the last. That’s the moment you’re most likely to make a mistake.
Here is the thing about overtaking on our roads. If you’re just waiting for a “clear stretch,” you’re gambling. The real skill is creating your own window of safety through positioning. This is what we drill into every rider in our advanced overtaking positioning course.
It transforms overtaking from a tense, binary gamble into a smooth, controlled procedure. You stop being a passenger in the situation and start being the pilot.
Why Most Riders Get Overtaking Positioning Wrong
Here is what most new riders get wrong about positioning. They think the overtake starts when they move into the opposite lane. That’s the final act. The overtake starts 100 meters back, with where you place your bike in your own lane.
The most common mistake? Riding center-lane or directly behind the vehicle you want to pass. You’re in their blind spot, you see only their bumper, and you have zero escape route. I have seen this mistake cause near-misses dozens of times when the vehicle ahead suddenly brakes or swerves.
Another big one is what I call “the commit and pray.” The rider pulls out, sees an oncoming vehicle, and freezes. They stay in the opposite lane, hoping the gap will magically widen. The real risk is not the oncoming car. It’s your own indecision eating up the precious meters you had.
Look, on a single-lane highway with mixed traffic, you don’t have the luxury of a long, empty passing lane. Your positioning is your early warning system and your primary safety tool. If you’re not using it, you’re just hoping luck is on your side.
I remember a student, Vikram, on our Pune campus track. He was a confident city rider but hated highway overtakes. In a drill, he was following a car we use for simulation. Every time, he’d sit right behind it, then dart out to look. He was completely blind until the last second.
We made him ride in the left third of his lane, a good two seconds behind. Suddenly, he could see past the car’s right side. He could see oncoming traffic five seconds earlier. His whole demeanor changed. The “dart” became a smooth, planned move. He learned that seeing earlier means deciding earlier, and that’s the core of safe overtaking.
What Actually Works on Indian Roads
Let’s talk about what actually works. First, you need to create a sightline. As you approach the vehicle from a safe following distance, move to the right side of your lane. Not into the opposite lane, just to the right edge.
This simple shift lets you see past the left corner of the vehicle ahead. You’re no longer staring at a tailgate. You’re scouting the road 200 meters ahead. You can see the oncoming traffic, the road condition, everything.
Your position is also a signal. The driver ahead can now see you in their left side mirror. You’ve announced your intention without using a turn signal yet. This is critical with our transport trucks and buses – if they see you, they often give you a little more room.
Now, you’re assessing. Is there a gap? How fast is the oncoming traffic closing? You do this while still safely in your lane. If the gap isn’t there, you just hold your position. You haven’t committed, you haven’t risked anything.
When you see your window, the overtake itself is almost an afterthought. A clear head check, indicator, a smooth move into the opposite lane, a decisive throttle input, and a swift return to your lane. But the work was done seconds before.
The final piece is the escape route. What if the car ahead swerves? Your right-side lane position gives you a buffer. You can move further right if you need to abort. You are never, ever trapped.
Overtaking isn’t about being faster than the vehicle in front. It’s about being smarter than the situation around you. Your lane position is your first and smartest move.
— Throttle Angels Instructor Team
Beginner vs Trained Rider Comparison
| Aspect | What Beginners Do | What Trained Riders Do |
|---|---|---|
| Lane Position Before Overtake | Ride directly behind the vehicle, in its blind spot and with zero visibility ahead. | Shift to the right side of their lane early, creating a sightline past the vehicle’s left side. |
| Decision Point | Decide to overtake only after pulling into the opposite lane, often reacting to a sudden “gap.” | Assess the entire situation from their own lane, committing only when the window is clear and safe. |
| Use of Mirrors | Check only their own mirrors briefly. Ignore the mirrors of the vehicle they’re passing. | Use their position to be visible in the lead vehicle’s left mirror, using it to communicate intent. |
| Escape Route | Have no planned escape. If something goes wrong, they panic and brake hard. | Always maintain a buffer zone to their right, knowing they can abort the pass smoothly if needed. |
| Overtaking in Bends | Attempt to overtake on blind curves, trusting that the road will be clear. | Use their offset position to see further through the bend, only overtaking when the exit is visible. |
Adapting to Indian Road Conditions
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Ready to master the roads of Bangalore or Pune? Join India’s premier motorcycle driving school.
Training Available in Bangalore & Pune
Book Your Trial Session Today!
Ready to master the roads of Bangalore or Pune? Join India’s premier motorcycle driving school.
Training Available in Bangalore & Pune
Our roads demand their own rules. You’ll have a tractor doing 20 kmph, a bus trying to overtake it, and a Maruti Swift trying to overtake the bus. Your advanced positioning is what keeps you out of that sandwich.
During monsoons, your right-side lane position is even more crucial. It keeps you out of the central water channel and gives you a clearer view past the spray and muck kicked up by the vehicle ahead. But you also need to watch for oncoming trucks throwing a wall of water at you.
On hilly roads like the Ghats, the game changes again. Here, positioning helps you use the corners of the road to see ahead. You might need to position yourself to see through a cut in the mountain or across a valley. It’s about using geography to your advantage.
And always, always watch for the unexpected left turn. A vehicle ahead slowing near a village entrance or a gap in the median is a huge red flag. Your offset position gives you that extra half-second to see a pedestrian or a scooter shooting out.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this overtaking course only for big bikes?
Absolutely not. The principles of positioning apply whether you ride a 150cc commuter or a 1000cc tourer. In fact, riders on smaller bikes benefit more because they need to plan their passes with greater care due to lower acceleration.
How do I practice this without endangering myself?
Start on wide, low-traffic highways. Practice just the positioning part first—following a friend’s car at a safe distance and maintaining a right-side offset. Don’t even overtake. Just get used to the improved view and the feeling of the bike in that part of the lane.
What if the oncoming driver flashes their lights at me?
Take it as a warning, not a challenge. It could mean “I see you, go ahead” or “Stay put, I’m not slowing down.” Your offset position gives you the best view to judge their speed. If in doubt, abort. A cancelled pass is always better than a forced one.
How much does Throttle Angels training cost?
Our courses start at competitive rates with flexible packages. Call Rajkumar at 9535350575 or Arun at 8169080740 for current pricing and batch schedules in Bangalore and Pune.
Can good positioning prevent accidents with animals crossing?
It significantly improves your chances. Your offset position lets you see the roadside and the vehicle’s front wheels. If a dog or cow darts out, the car ahead will brake or swerve. Seeing their reaction a split-second earlier gives you that critical time to respond calmly.
Look, the goal is to make this thinking automatic. You shouldn’t be white-knuckling every overtake on a long tour. It should feel smooth, almost effortless.
Your bike is nimble. Use that agility to position yourself for information, not just for the pass. When you do that, you ride not just faster, but smarter and safer for thousands of kilometers to come.
Book Your Trial Session Today!
Ready to master the roads of Bangalore or Pune? Join India’s premier motorcycle driving school.
Training Available in Bangalore & Pune