free-symbols

Car Sliding Symbol

⛐ “Car Sliding” is used to show loss of traction or skidding vehicles.

U+26D0

The ⛐ symbol, named “CAR SLIDING,” helps communicate a skidding or sliding car scenario. It’s commonly used as a quick visual cue in safety messaging, maps, and UI alerts. Copy and paste it anywhere text symbols are supported.

Car Sliding Symbol Meaning

⛐ (Unicode U+26D0) is the “CAR SLIDING” symbol. It visually represents a vehicle that is sliding or skidding, which is often associated with slippery roads, loss of traction, or hazardous driving conditions. People use it to add immediate context to a warning or announcement—especially when the message is about safety, weather impacts, or driving risks. In interfaces and designs, it can function as an icon-like indicator for “danger,” “caution,” or “reduced control,” without needing long text explanations.

Common uses

  • Road safety notices for icy or wet conditions
  • Traffic updates or incident cards in apps and dashboards
  • Warning labels in vehicle-related documentation and guides
  • Social media posts about dangerous driving or slow traffic
  • UI icons for caution states in navigation and maps

Examples

⛐ Car Sliding Symbol

  • ⛐ Road is slippery—drive slowly.
  • ⛐ Accident risk may be higher today.
  • Heads up: ⛐ slick conditions reported nearby.
  • ⛐ Expect delays; vehicles may be skidding.
  • Please reduce speed—⛐ conditions ahead.

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+26D0
HTML Entity⛐
HTML Code⛐
CSS\26D0

FAQ

What does ⛐ mean?

⛐ is the “Car Sliding” symbol, used to indicate a vehicle skidding or sliding, often implying slippery or hazardous road conditions.

How can I copy ⛐ for use in my text?

Copy the character directly (⛐) from this page, or use the provided HTML/CSS/JavaScript escapes listed under copy variations.

Is ⛐ suitable for mobile and web interfaces?

It’s commonly used as a simple visual indicator in text. Like all Unicode symbols, appearance can vary by font and platform.

Where should I use ⛐ in design or posts?

Use it for quick safety cues—such as road condition warnings, traffic incident updates, or UI states that imply caution or loss of traction.