Im pretty confident in driving abilities for taking the test this week with nearly two months of driving with someone else. My only real issue with taking my drivers test is that its my understanding sometimes DMVs have a secret everyone fails once policy, or some instructors do. I’m mainly wondering on average in the US low long did people have to wait.
Not. I didn’t fail.
It was over 20 years ago, but I passed mine the first time. And if you’re taking the test for the BMV they legally have to be fair, they can be super picky, but if you don’t do anything wrong they can’t falsely penalize you.
If you’re worried the person giving you the test is going to be super picky then just be super careful.Don’t plan to fail. It’s definitely not true that everyone fails once.
As a personal tip, book one lesson with a driving instructor before your test. They’ll be able to call out all your mistakes, and it will be fresh in your mind during the real test.
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It depends on the state and how busy the DMV is.
I didn’t fail, and I never heard the “everyone fails once” thing. But also I learned from a private driving school, where the test was given by my regular instructor and had exactly the same vibe as all our regular practice sessions did.
I failed my first time. I panicked and forgot how to parallel park. I think I spent the next month or so practicing and took it again. I don’t think I’ve heard of people failing so frequently - so I’m not sure about that fail policy
I failed my first time. The instructor never told me why I failed, so I have no idea what I needed to improve on. I remember thinking it MUST be the parallel parking section, so I asked my dad to take me out to the DMV so I could spend an hour or two perfecting my parallel parking.
I scheduled a second test for the next Sunday. Little did I realize this was Super Bowl Sunday. The instructor I got that time around was very chill and just told me to drive through a nearby neighborhood a few times so we could wrap things up quickly. I was never even asked to parallel park.
All of this to say that I don’t think the DMV has a secret failing policy, but I can guarantee you that some instructors take it more seriously than others.
I technically failed my first time, as the backup lights in my car didn’t work, so I didn’t even get to the driving part. They let me use a different vehicle the same day, so I passed with a vehicle that I didn’t drive too often. I’ve never heard of a secret policy where everyone automatically fails, and most of the people I’ve known pass the first time, so I’m guessing it’s some urban legend.
If anything I’ve heard of people always getting marked down for something but arbitrarily failing everyone completely on their first try would just lead to a huge backlog of test takers.
I could see why someone would think it, though. My girlfriend got her license very late, we went to the same DMV 3 times to take the test. First time, bapped the pole during the parallel park, instant fail, do not pass go, do not collect a driver’s license. Second time, didn’t pass the parallel park but didn’t bap the pole, so continued. Got marked “Fail” on things. More practice, third time, again, tons of fails over minor errors. Note that there is a middle point between good and fail, but they literally never used it.
Fourth time, I said screw that DMV, we’re going to a different one. We went to a town with a tiny DMV with one little older lady running it, she literally had to lock up the office portion for every road test because she was alone. Girlfriend miraculously did the parallel park perfect, not a single fail on anything, and 2/3 of the middle scores. Passed easily.
First DMV had a lot of young workers, so my thinking is they like to mark everything they can to show their bosses how good they are at nitpicking other people’s driving.
It varies from state to state. Some let you take it the next day, others might require you to wait a few weeks. At least that is what I remember from when I was worried about failing the test. Although, I’ve never really heard of a practice where the DMV or an instructor fails everyone the first time. Some instructors might be stricter than others, but I don’t think it’s a policy across DMVs and driving instructors. Besides, with two months of practice, you should be fine. So long as you can obey traffic laws and do what the instructor says you should pass.
Which time?
Only took it once, I don’t know anyone personally that took it more than once. If there’s a minimum wait time it would be posted in your state’s policies, but I’d guess they’ll take your money for the second test as soon as you want the too
Said I could come back the next day, as it turned out I was busy that day so I passed the following day instead. I failed because I got over confident backing out of a parking spot an nudged a cone. Or, as he put it, I murdered a toddler. Fair enough. We did the backing up thing first so I could get that out of the way, the rest of the test was easy.
I’ve never heard of a weird secret code to force you to fail, just relax and don’t run over any toddlers, I mean cones, and I’m sure you’ll be just fine!
So I figured out, minor offenses are 2 weeks, and major ones on 30 days
Not necessarily. You can get an ID from the DMV that doesn’t grant you a drivers license, but the drivers license servers exactly the same purpose and allows you to drive, something 90% of the population want. So drivers license obviously is extremely more popular but you can get a plastic ID card similar to it from the DMV.
In my state you actually need to get a plastic card before taking the test. Since you need multiple forms of ID