Learning to Drive Young: How Pre-17 Driver Training is Shaping Safer, Confident Drivers

Government data reveals a clear trend: the average age of newly qualified drivers in the UK has now climbed beyond 25 years. In 2007, drivers passed their test at an average age of 22 years and 10 months. By last year, this figure had risen to 25 years and 1 month. But for those who…

Government data reveals a clear trend: the average age of newly qualified drivers in the UK has now climbed beyond 25 years. In 2007, drivers passed their test at an average age of 22 years and 10 months. By last year, this figure had risen to 25 years and 1 month. But for those who start learning earlier, the story is very different.

Research from Young Driver, the UK’s largest driving school for under-17s, shows that pre-17 learners are 62% more likely to pass their test first time and, on average, seven years earlier than the national average. In fact, Young Driver alumni pass their tests at an average age of just 17 years and 9 months, with three-quarters passing before their 18th birthday.

The stakes have never been higher. With practical driving test waiting lists still exceeding 20 weeks across most of the UK, failing a test can mean a potentially long wait for a retake. And from this week, the driving test itself has been updated: students will spend longer on faster roads, and examiners now have the power to ‘increase the length of independent driving’. These changes make extended, consistent learning more crucial than ever.

The Young Driver Advantage

Young Driver starts teaching children as young as nine in full-size, dual-controlled cars such as Suzuki Swifts. Instruction takes place on private land that mimics real road conditions, with junctions, roundabouts, and areas for practicing manoeuvres. The focus is on building confidence and skill progressively, rather than rushing to pass a test.

The results speak for themselves. Eight out of ten Young Driver alumni (78%) pass their practical test first time, compared with just 48% nationally. Early learning also leads to safer drivers: while one in five newly qualified drivers has an accident within six months of passing, that figure drops to just one in 25 for Young Driver graduates.

Ian Mulingani, Managing Director of Young Driver, explains: “Driving is a vital skill for most of the UK population. By teaching youngsters over a longer period, we remove the pressure and rush to pass the test, creating drivers who are better prepared, pass earlier, and—most importantly—are safer once on the road.

“Starting younger helps learners build essential neural pathways, so basic skills like gear changes and steering become automatic, allowing them to focus on more complex driving tasks, such as hazard awareness. Younger learners are like sponges—they absorb information quickly and are more receptive to safety messages. Eighty-eight per cent of our past pupils say Young Driver helped them pass their test faster, and 86% say it made them safer drivers.”

Why Early Training Matters More Than Ever

With longer waiting times for driving tests and new test changes increasing the demands on learners, early preparation is key. Pre-17 driver training provides a head start, not just in passing the test first time, but in cultivating the confidence, experience, and road awareness that can make a lifelong difference in safety.

For parents and young learners, the message is clear: starting early isn’t just about convenience—it’s about creating safer, more capable drivers for the future.


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