Since June 2018, learner drivers with a DVSA-approved instructor can legally drive on motorways during lessons. DriveSQ's motorway lessons in Manchester give you the skills and confidence to handle the M60 ring road, M62 trans-Pennine route, M56 towards the airport, and other major motorways in the Greater Manchester network — before you pass your test.
Why Motorway Lessons Matter
Motorways carry the highest volumes of traffic at the highest speeds. Without professional training, your first solo motorway experience after passing your test can be terrifying. DriveSQ's motorway lessons eliminate that fear by teaching you the specific skills needed for safe, confident motorway driving while you still have an instructor beside you with dual controls.
Key motorway skills include:
- Joining the motorway — using the slip road to build speed, checking mirrors and blind spots, merging safely with traffic moving at 60–70 mph
- Lane discipline — understanding the "keep left unless overtaking" rule, reading lane markings, and positioning correctly
- Overtaking — mirror checks, signalling, moving out, passing, and returning to the left lane safely
- Leaving the motorway — reading countdown markers, signalling in good time, decelerating on the slip road (not the main carriageway)
- Speed management — maintaining a safe following distance at speed, adjusting for weather and traffic, understanding variable speed limits on smart motorways
Manchester's Motorway Network
Greater Manchester has one of the densest motorway networks in the UK, making it an ideal place to learn. During your DriveSQ motorway lessons, you may cover:
- M60 (Manchester Outer Ring Road) — the orbital motorway that circles Manchester. It features complex junctions at Stockport (junction with M63/A6), Denton, and Prestwich. The M60 includes sections with variable speed limits and heavy congestion at peak times.
- M62 (Trans-Pennine) — one of the UK's busiest motorways, linking Manchester to Leeds and Liverpool. It features steep gradients, exposed sections, and heavy HGV traffic. The M62/M60 interchange at Simister Island is notoriously complex.
- M56 (Manchester to Chester/Airport) — connects the city to Manchester Airport and Cheshire. This is often learners' first motorway experience because it has relatively straightforward junctions and moderate traffic volumes.
- M67 (Denton to Mottram) — a shorter motorway leading east from Manchester. Useful for practising joining and leaving without committing to a long motorway stretch.
Smart Motorways
Several sections of Manchester's motorway network operate as smart motorways, where the hard shoulder is used as a running lane during busy periods and electronic signs display mandatory variable speed limits. Understanding smart motorway rules is essential:
- Red X — the lane is closed. You must not drive in a lane with a red X displayed above it. It is a criminal offence.
- Variable speed limits — the speed shown on the overhead gantry is mandatory (not advisory). Cameras enforce these limits.
- Emergency refuge areas — these replace the hard shoulder. Know where they are and use them in an emergency.
- Stopped vehicle detection — smart motorways use radar to detect stopped vehicles and set red X signals automatically.
When to Take Motorway Lessons
DriveSQ recommends motorway lessons once you are comfortable with dual carriageway driving at 50–60 mph, have good mirror habits, and can change lanes confidently. This is typically around lesson 15–20 for most learners. Your instructor will introduce motorway driving when they judge you are ready — there is no point going on the motorway before your basic skills are solid.
Key Rule: Learners can only drive on motorways with a DVSA-approved driving instructor (green badge) in a car fitted with dual controls. You cannot practise on motorways with a friend or family member, even if they are a qualified driver.