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DVSA driving test rule changes 2026: everything learners need to know

Three significant changes to how practical driving tests are booked came into effect across 2026. Here is what changed, when it changed, and what it means if you are waiting for a test.

By DriveSidekick  |  June 2026  |  7 min read

Learner drivers Driving instructors

Change 1 — You can only move your test to one of 3 nearest centres

In effect since: May 2026

Before this change, learners could transfer their practical test to any test centre in the country. Since May 2026, the DVSA restricts transfers to the 3 centres geographically nearest to the learner's current centre — using driving distance calculated by Google Maps avoiding motorways, which is how the DVSA defines it.

This matters because:

Find your 3 nearest centres

Use the Nearest Test Centre finder to see exactly which 3 centres apply to your current booking.

Change 2 — You are limited to 2 booking changes

In effect since: March 2026

Learners can now only change their test date or centre twice in total. Previously there was no hard limit on changes. This was introduced to prevent the practice of booking a distant slot and repeatedly moving it closer — a tactic that was contributing to the booking backlog.

What this means in practice:

Worth knowing

Changing multiple details at once — the date and the centre, for example — still counts as a single change. If you need to make a significant adjustment, do everything in one go to preserve your remaining changes.

Change 3 — Learner-only bookings

In effect since: March 2026

Test bookings are now restricted to the learner themselves. Previously, driving instructors could book tests on behalf of students using their DVSA login. This was introduced in response to evidence that some instructor credentials were being sold to resellers who booked tests in bulk and sold slots at a markup.

Instructors can still help students navigate the booking system but cannot book on their behalf. From March 2026 it is also illegal to change, cancel or exchange a test on behalf of another person — so even well-intentioned instructor help now carries legal risk.

The waiting time picture in 2026

Separately from the booking rule changes, the DVSA published a new median waiting time measure in June 2026 — the first true waiting time figure they have ever released. The previous widely-quoted figure (currently around 22 weeks nationally) was a booking availability measure, not a waiting time. The real median in May 2026 was 9.7 weeks nationally.

This is a significant distinction. The availability figure tells you how far in the future the next open slot is. The median waiting time tells you how long learners actually wait between booking and sitting their test. The two numbers measure different things, and for most learners the real wait is considerably shorter than the headline figure suggested.

Check your centre's real waiting time

See the median waiting time for your test centre at the Waiting Time Checker — it uses the new DVSA data, not the old availability figure.

What to do now


Practise the roads at your test centre

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