Reversing Manoeuvres on the Driving Test
During your driving test, the examiner will ask you to perform one reversing manoeuvre. There are four possible manoeuvres, and you will not know which one until the examiner instructs you. DriveSQ instructors ensure you are competent and confident in all four before your test day.
The four possible manoeuvres are:
- Parallel parking at the side of the road
- Bay parking (driving into a bay and reversing out, or reversing into a bay and driving out)
- Pulling up on the right-hand side of the road, reversing two car lengths, and rejoining traffic
- The examiner may also choose not to include a reversing manoeuvre (though this is less common)
Key Principles for All Reversing Manoeuvres
Regardless of which manoeuvre you perform, these principles apply to all of them:
- Observation is paramount — You must look around continuously while reversing. Check all mirrors, look over both shoulders, and be aware of pedestrians, cyclists, and other vehicles. If anyone approaches, stop and wait
- Accuracy matters but is not absolute — You are not expected to perform the manoeuvre perfectly. Reasonable accuracy is sufficient. A slightly wonky finish is a minor fault, not a serious one
- Speed control — Move very slowly. Use the clutch at the bite point to control speed rather than the accelerator. Slower movement gives you more time to steer and observe
- You can correct — If you realise you are going wrong, you may reposition. Pull forward and try again. This is not a fault if done safely with good observation. Repeated corrections suggest a lack of control
- Safety overrides accuracy — If you need to stop for a pedestrian or vehicle, stop immediately. The examiner wants to see safe driving, not robotic precision
Manoeuvre 1: Parallel Parking
Parallel parking is the most commonly requested manoeuvre and the one many learners find most challenging. The key is a consistent reference point system that your DriveSQ instructor will teach you.
Step-by-Step Technique
- Pull up alongside the target car — Position your car parallel to the parked car, approximately half a metre to one metre away. Align your left mirror roughly with their left mirror (or your instructor will give you a specific reference point for your car)
- Select reverse gear — Check all around for safety
- Begin reversing slowly — Look over your left shoulder through the rear window
- Reference point 1 — When the rear of the parked car appears at a specific point in your rear window (your instructor will identify the exact point for your car), turn the steering wheel one full turn to the left
- Continue reversing — Keep checking mirrors and all around. Watch the front of your car — it will swing out into the road. If a car approaches, pause
- Reference point 2 — When you reach a specific angle (approximately 45 degrees to the kerb, visible through your left mirror), straighten the wheel. Continue reversing straight back
- Reference point 3 — When the kerb begins to disappear at a specific point in your left mirror, turn the wheel one full turn to the right to bring the car parallel with the kerb
- Straighten up — Once parallel, straighten the wheel and stop. Apply the handbrake
Common Parallel Parking Mistakes
- Mounting the kerb — Turning too early or too sharply. If you feel the car climbing the kerb, stop, pull forward, and readjust
- Ending up too far from the kerb — Turning too late. You may pull forward and reposition
- Hitting the car behind or in front — Poor spatial awareness. Use your mirrors and turn your head to check distances
- Forgetting observations — The most common serious fault. You must check all around continuously
Manoeuvre 2: Bay Parking
Bay parking can be either driving forward into a bay and reversing out, or reversing into a bay and driving out. The examiner will specify which. This typically takes place in a car park at or near the driving test centre.
Reversing Into a Bay
- Position your car — Drive past your chosen bay. Your instructor will teach you specific reference points — typically when a certain line aligns with a point on your car
- Stop and select reverse
- Check all around for pedestrians and other cars
- Begin reversing slowly, turning the wheel fully in the direction of the bay
- Use your mirrors to check you are centred between the white lines
- Straighten up as the car enters the bay
- Stop before reaching the end of the bay
Driving Forward Into a Bay
- Approach the bay at a slight angle, positioning your car to give a clear turning arc
- Turn the wheel to steer into the bay
- Straighten up as you enter, using side mirrors to check alignment with the lines
- Stop within the bay
- To reverse out: check all mirrors and both shoulders, reverse slowly, turning the wheel as you exit
Manoeuvre 3: Pulling Up on the Right
This manoeuvre requires you to pull up on the right-hand side of the road (which feels unusual as we normally stop on the left), reverse two car lengths, then rejoin traffic.
Step-by-Step
- The examiner will say: “I’d like you to pull up on the right when it’s safe to do so.”
- Check mirrors — Interior, right mirror, and right blind spot
- Signal right and cross to the right side of the road when safe
- Stop reasonably close to the right kerb and parallel to it
- The examiner will then say: “I’d like you to reverse about two car lengths, keeping close to the kerb.”
- Check all around before reversing. Look over your left shoulder (the traffic side)
- Reverse slowly about two car lengths, using the right mirror to maintain position near the kerb
- Stop when you have reversed far enough
- The examiner will say: “When you’re ready, rejoin the traffic on the left.”
- Check all around, signal left, and cross back to the left side when safe
Key Points
- You are crossing the road into oncoming traffic — thorough observation is critical
- When reversing on the right, you are on the “wrong” side — be extra vigilant for approaching vehicles
- Rejoining traffic requires crossing the road again — treat it like pulling out of a junction
Practising Manoeuvres with DriveSQ
DriveSQ instructors begin manoeuvre training once you have solid control skills (typically around lesson 10–15). We practise on quiet residential streets first, then progress to busier locations and eventually the roads around your test centre. By test day, you will have performed each manoeuvre dozens of times in varied locations across Manchester.
The manoeuvres that DriveSQ test-centre learners most commonly face depend on the centre: Didsbury and Sale test centres frequently test parallel parking on nearby residential streets, while Cheetham Hill often uses bay parking in the centre’s car park.
DriveSQ Success Tip
The secret to confident manoeuvres is slow speed + constant observation. Move the car as slowly as possible — this gives you maximum time to steer accurately and check for hazards. If in doubt, stop. You can always pause, reassess, and continue. The examiner rewards safe, controlled driving over speed.
Next Steps
Continue to Chapter 12: Parallel Parking & Bay Parking for more detailed technique breakdowns and advanced tips for perfecting your parking skills.