The best and worst places to try to get a driving test in the UK has now been revealed.
Learning to drive as soon as they can is on plenty of young people's radar from the age of 17 and is seen as the first ticket to freedom and independence.
Some people just never got round to it, though, and find themselves needing to learn a little later in life.
Be it due to a baby on the way, or moving somewhere a little more remote, lots of people will continue wanting to learn to drive every year.
Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) chief Loveday Ryder said in a letter published in October: "Unfortunately, demand for tests continues to be very high. The current national average waiting time for a car test is around 15 weeks. 79 test centres have a waiting time of the maximum 24 weeks."
Despite this, waiting times remain high and CarMats.co.uk researched the worst places to try to book a test with the DVSA, with either no tests available at all or huge waiting times.
Worst places in the UK to wait for a driving test
Goodmayes in Ilford, east London, takes the top spot for the worst place to wait for a driving test.
To fight the backlog, the DVSA returned to a policy of seven tests a day for each examiner, offered out-of-hours weekend and driving tests, and ensured other DVSA employees who don't normally carry out tests take part.
Car Mats compiled the 50 worst places in the UK to try and book a test. The first 41 areas had no tests available at all, while the rest had to wait a whopping 23 weeks.
17 of the locations are in London, which may well be down to a high population in a small area.
They were as follows:
- Goodmayes (London)
- Isleworth (Fleming Way) (London)
- Slough (London)
- Morden (London)
- Chingford (London)
- Reading
- West Didsbury (Manchester)
- Mill Hill (London)
- Cardiff Llanishen
- Peterborough
- Hither Green (London)
- Tolworth (London)
- Cambridge (Brookmount Court)
- Chadderton
- Oxford (Cowley)
- Cheetham Hill (Manchester)
- Bletchley
- Sale (Manchester)
- Luton
- Barking (Tanner Street) (London)
- Preston
- Mitcham (London)
- Featherstone
- Wood Green (London)
- Farnborough
- Lancing
- Sidcup (London)
- Ipswich
- Hull
- Wanstead (London)
- Colchester
- West Wickham (London)
- Gillingham
- Crawley
- Bromley (London)
- Hornchurch (London)
- St Albans
- Hyde (Manchester)
- Coventry
- Stoke-on-Trent (Newcastle-Under-Lyme)
- Leighton Buzzard (Stanbridge Road)
- Huddersfield
- Sheffield (Middlewood Road)
- Rochdale (Manchester)
- Bury St Edmunds
- Greenford (Horsenden Lane - London)
- Ashfield
- Herne Bay
- York
- Banbury
The demand for tests is high due in part to the pandemic restrictions in place over recent months and a low pass rate for first-time learners.
The best places in the UK to book a driving test.
Kirkcaldy in Scotland takes the proud crown of the lowest waiting times for a driving test in the country, with a wait of just two weeks.
- Kirkcaldy - two weeks
- Speke (Liverpool) - 10 weeks
- Plymouth - 13 weeks
- Southampton (Maybush) - 14 weeks
- Exeter - 14 weeks
- Upton - 14 weeks
- Derby (Alvaston) - 15 weeks
- Worcester - 15 weeks
- Blackpool - 15 weeks
- Wolverhampton - 17 weeks
- Newton Abbot - 17 weeks
- Rotherham - 17 weeks
- Norris Green (Liverpool) - 18 weeks
- Dudley - 18 weeks
- Portsmouth - 18 weeks
- Doncaster - 18 weeks
- Poole - 19 weeks
- Leeds - 20 weeks
- Bradford (Thornbury) - 20 weeks
- Bristol (Kingswood) - 21 weeks
Have you struggled to book your driving test? Let us know in the comments below