Intensive driving courses: the ultimate guide

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Learning to drive brings all manner of benefits, helping you to get mobile, opening up job prospects and bringing new freedom to you and your family. One of the easiest ways to get your licence quickly is to take an intensive driving course.

Whether you need to cram for the written theory test, practice for the hazard perception test or pass your practical test in the fastest possible time, a set of intensive driving lessons will help you to pass in the quickest time. But what’s involved? Let Auto Express guide you…

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The first hurdle on the way towards passing your driving test is the written exam. The driving theory test has changed over the years, and today learners have to sit in front of a touchscreen to take the test. It takes less than an hour, and if you have bought one of the number of guides available to help you get through it or are using an online guide, then it should be pretty easy to pass. 

After that, you have two years to take and pass your practical driving test. If you have time, then the best way to approach this is by booking lessons with a qualified instructor, who will give you tuition and be able to advise how long it’ll take you to get up to a good enough standard to be able to pass your test.

If you already have a decent grasp of how to drive, whether it’s through lessons such as these or a good basic level of knowledge from watching and questioning friends or family, then an intensive course could be for you. 

Instead of taking one or two lessons a week over several months, you do several hours of lessons at once to shorten the time needed to get your licence. These can vary from a few days to a couple of weeks, depending on your existing standard and natural skill.  

What are intensive driving courses?

An intensive driving course crams all you need to know to pass your test into a short period of time with one-to-one tuition. By shortening the time between lessons you should need less time to catch up and it can cost less too.

The content of the course will be exactly the same as a series of driving lessons, but it can often be tailored to focus on areas that the learner isn’t comfortable on, or is weakest. 

Most of these courses offer help with the theory test for an extra fee while driving courses for drivers who only want an automatic transmission licence are available too.

How long with an intensive driving course take?

The market for intensive courses is so diverse that the length of time an intensive driving course runs for is virtually up to you and your skill level. If you’ve already taken a few lessons and want a crash course ahead of a test, you can opt for a two-day course with just 10 hours of training.

If you’re going for a test with no previous experience of driving at all, then extended 14-day intensive courses are on offer. Then you’ve got almost everything in between from six hours spread over 10 days or 24 hours spread over eight days. The choice really is yours.

There are even residential driving courses which last anywhere up to a week with locations across the UK. Your driving test will be booked for the last day of your stay, so you’ll leave this residential course with a driving licence – if you pass!

What will an intensive course cost and will I save money?

The cost of driving lessons and taking a test is one of the biggest reasons young people don’t learn to drive at the moment. And these intensive driving courses aren’t necessarily a cheap option, either. Some start from as little as £180, but that’s for a short course.

As soon as you start increasing the length of the course, naturally, the cost goes up. And for longer courses, the fee can be upwards of £800. It seems high, but the average hourly driving lesson is priced at £24 and the Driving and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) recommend 47 hours of training before your test, meaning most pay upwards of £1,000 to learn to drive. That’s before paying to take the practical and theory test, then potentially paying again if you fail.

However, learning to drive intensively can be cheaper in the long run as you are less likely to forget the skills learned from one lesson to the next. Driving schools tend to offer cheaper rates for intensive courses too.

What are the negatives associated with intensive driving courses?

Clearly, packing all this learning into a short space of time can have some negative impacts. The biggest and most obvious is that you don’t rack up the same experience behind the wheel as you might if you’re having lessons over a longer period of time and practising in between with friends and family.

Likewise, if you cram all of your learning into an intensive driving course, the road type you’re on and the conditions are likely to be fairly static, taking out two big variables that come into play when you’re driving. The residential course can also be far away from the area where you will actually need to drive regularly when you pass, too. 

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It’s probably best to take a short intensive course as final prep for your test once you’ve got a few hours of experience, or if you’ve previously had lessons and want a recap ahead of a test.

It’s also worth checking you’re not being over-charged for booking the theory or driving test when signing up for an intensive driving course, as some firms will try to charge a premium. 

What about courses for driver training after you’ve passed? 

Intensive driving courses aren’t just reserved for passing your test, there are plenty of courses available to further your driving skills.

Pass Plus is probably the most popular – as this focuses on motorway driving – but the Institute of Advanced Motorists also offers an assessment-based programme to develop your skills at the wheel. It’s worth considering one of these, as it may help reduce your insurance premiums – although the amount you save differs between insurers.

Another course that’s worth taking is trailer tuition. Companies can offer brief lessons on how to tow a trailer and execute manoeuvres such as reversing. Anyone who has passed their test since 1 January 1997 will need to pass an additional test if they want to tow a combination of car and trailer that will weight in excess of 3.5 tonnes – that’s about the same as a 4×4 towing a car trailer or horsebox, for example.

Beyond that there are also courses for driving in Europe, winter driving, off-road and track tuition, so passing your test can be just the start of your learning curve.

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