The UK Could Soon Introduce A Tiered Driving Licence

In an effort to cut the number of collisions involving young and/or inexperienced drivers, the British Prime Minister is looking at a tougher, tiered licence
The UK Could Soon Introduce A Tiered Driving Licence

The UK is to look at the possible benefits of a graduated driving licence system, where newly-qualified drivers will have restrictions placed upon them for a set amount of time.

Theresa May said in parliament that she would “look at” introducing a tiered driving licence. The Prime Minister is also asking the Department for Transport (DfT) to do the same.

Trials in other countries have been a success, reports Auto Express, reducing the amount of accidents involving young and inexperienced drivers. At present one on four young drivers ends up in an accident within two years after passing their tests.

The UK Could Soon Introduce A Tiered Driving Licence

Every year in the UK there are 400 deaths and serious injuries in crashes involving drivers with less than a couple of years on the roads. In Northern Ireland you have to use an R-plate for a year after passing your test, and you’re not allowed to breach 45mph. In Finland the test pass is just a stepping stone, beyond which is more and tougher testing – including night-time driving.

Auto Express cites a 2013 DfT study that found “indisputable” evidence that a tiered driving licence system cuts the numbers of crashes. It suggested a figure of 4471 annual casualties saved, with financial benefits of £224 million thanks to lower demand on the emergency services and NHS.

Source: Auto Express

Comments

Anonymous

Just do it like motorcycle license… 16 year olds can drive small cars like citroen c1 18 years you can drive cars that has less than 1.6 liter capacity and after owning that license for two years they can drive whatever they want.

02/17/2018 - 10:00 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

NO SHUT UP
wait im 19 now
carry on

02/17/2018 - 20:35 |
1 | 1
RXB YT

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

tbf insurance prices effectively make this happen anyway unless you’re rich lol

02/18/2018 - 01:07 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Personally i would say its education, teach young drivers how to respect a car, how to handle a car properly!
no reason why a 18 year old can’t drive a 300hp car, they just need to be sensible and know what is appropriate.

02/19/2018 - 09:28 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

do it

02/17/2018 - 13:20 |
2 | 1
The Blue Corolla

With the use of systems like these, insurance should be cheaper too, if say at 18 it cost €400 a year for everyone (regardless of car make and model) , your premium should only go up if you breach the rules of the tier your on or have an accident.

02/17/2018 - 18:31 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

You cant go over 45 for 1 year? Thats dumb. How about harder tests.

02/18/2018 - 02:59 |
0 | 0
BoostAddict 1

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

It really isn’t. I’m not allowed to drive on any road with a speed limit above 80 km/h. I can’t even drive to school, but I’ve seen enough crash tests and crashes due to inexperienced drivers to know that this saves lives.

03/29/2018 - 02:20 |
0 | 0
got a new account

This guy needs that

02/18/2018 - 12:26 |
0 | 0
Dyl2250

As an Aussie this confused for a bit, we have 3 stages L plates then Red and Green plates, they each have different restrictions before you get your full licence

02/18/2018 - 13:20 |
0 | 0
Callum Luker

I think a compulsory speed-awareness course, motorway lessons and a couple days riding shotgun in an HGV would be plenty.

02/18/2018 - 21:33 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

“At present one on four young drivers ends up in an accident within two years after passing their tests.”

  • I’m not a statistic.
02/19/2018 - 04:46 |
0 | 0
OctyVRS

will they ever tackle the ageing driver population who cause accidents and damage and leave the scene? Having seen 3 of these in the 2 weeks and had to stop 2 of them from driving off after they have damaged other peoples cars and property.

02/19/2018 - 07:59 |
0 | 0
BoostAddict 1

You mean you don’t have a tiered system? Just copy what we did over here in Canada with the Graduated Licencing system.

02/20/2018 - 03:06 |
0 | 0

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