Tips from Driving Examiners: in for a penny, in for a pound - TopicsExpress



          

Tips from Driving Examiners: in for a penny, in for a pound Submitted By: Safe Driving for Life – DanEMG , On: June 24, 2014 - 13:03 The cost of learning to drive can vary enormously from person to person, depending on their ability and experience. Those who need the fewest lessons are usually those who’ve already had some driving experience and have a natural talent for driving. So, if you’re not a ‘natural’, and you’ve had no previous driving experience, you’ll probably need quite a few lessons – like most people. If you pass in under 35 lessons, having had no other driving experience, then you’ve done brilliantly! To take 40 or 50 lessons is quite normal. Even having to take over 100 isn’t rare. If you’re paying £25 per lesson, it’s unlikely that you’ll spend less than £1000. Depending on your abilities, you may need to spend more. You’ll also need to factor in the cost of taking both the theory test and the practical driving test at least once, and extra lessons between any failed driving tests. So how long is a piece of string? You have to be realistic about how much you may have to spend to get your licence. If you’ve budgeted for, say, £500 and run out of money when you’re only halfway there, you may have to abandon learning to drive until a later date. You have to be of a fairly high standard to pass your driving test, so good driving instructors will want to give their pupils as many lessons as it takes to get them up to that standard*. And they’ll be making sure that they understand each learner’s strengths and needs along the way. On the other hand, learner drivers or their parents often try to pull in the other direction, with a cry of ‘Surely they should be taking their test by now!” Think about it: isn’t it in everybody’s best interests that learner drivers take just a few more, good-quality lessons – for road safety reasons and so they don’t waste money on test fees when they have little chance of passing? The more time and money you put into learning to drive, the better driver you will become and more likely to pass your test first time. And, just as importantly, once you have the freedom of the roads you’re less likely to have an expensive prang which could bump up your insurance premiums or, worse, injure yourself or others. Surely that’s what it’s all about? The message here is: don’t begin to learn to drive until you can go all the way. In for a penny, in for a pound! For more information about the costs of learning to drive, have a look at our ‘costs of learning to drive’ infographic. *You can learn more about DVSA’s national driving standards from this infographic.
Posted on: Sun, 06 Jul 2014 06:05:39 +0000

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