How driving test booking is changing for learner drivers

TL;DR
Starting May 12, learner drivers must book their own driving tests, eliminating instructor bookings. This change aims to reduce long waiting times and prevent bots from monopolizing test slots.
Key points
- Changes to driving test booking start on May 12
- Learner drivers must book their own tests
- Instructors can no longer book tests for students
- Aim to reduce long waiting lists
- Prevent bots from bulk-buying test slots
From 12 May, there will be changes to how you book your driving test.
The changes are aimed at reducing long waiting lists of up to six months, and preventing slots from being bulk-bought by bots and firms who resell them to learner drivers at inflated prices.
From 12 May, only you will be able to book, change or swap your own driving test, not anyone else - including your driving instructor.
Under the old rules, instructors could book tests on behalf of their students, but this is now banned.
Tests already booked by instructors are unaffected.
A BBC investigation in December found that some driving instructors were offered kickbacks of up to £250 a month to sell their official test-booking login details to touts, who used those details to book driving tests in bulk and sell them to learners on WhatsApp and Facebook, charging as much as £500 for tests.
Tests have a standard fee of £62 on weekdays and £75 on evenings, weekends and bank holidays.
Speak to your instructor to make sure you're ready to take the test, then get their reference number. You enter this when you book to make sure your instructor is available.
You can help someone you know book and manage their driving test, but they must be with you while you help them, and all confirmations must be set up to be sent to their email or phone number. If they don't have email, you can help them set up an account.
Since 31 March, you can only make two changes to your booked slot.
If you had used up all your changes under the old rules (you were allowed to make six changes), you can make two more changes from 31 March.
Changing the date or time counts as a change, changing the test centre counts as a change, and swapping your slot with another learner driver counts as a change.
If you change more than one thing at the same time, such as the date and test centre, this counts as one change.
If the DVSA changes your test, that does not count as a change.
If you need to make more than two changes to your booking, you will have to cancel your test and book a new one.
You will be refunded if you cancel at least 10 working days before your test date.
From 9 June, if you want to move your test, you can only move it to the three test centres closest to where your test is booked.
Only book at a test centre you intend to use, and choose a realistic date for when you'll be ready to take the test.
You can find more guidance on where you can book, and more about the new driving test booking changes, here.
Q&A
What are the new rules for booking driving tests starting May 12?
From May 12, only learner drivers can book, change, or swap their own driving tests, banning instructors from doing so.
Why are changes being made to the driving test booking system?
The changes aim to reduce waiting lists of up to six months and prevent bots from buying slots to resell at inflated prices.
Will previously booked driving tests by instructors be affected by the new rules?
No, tests already booked by instructors will remain unaffected by the new booking rules.





