Perfecting Your Parking
Chapter 11 covered the fundamentals of all reversing manoeuvres. This chapter dives deeper into parallel parking and bay parking specifically — providing the detailed technique, reference points, and troubleshooting that DriveSQ instructors use to get learners test-ready.
Parking manoeuvres are where many learners lose confidence, but with systematic practice, they become the most predictable and controllable part of your driving. Unlike junctions and roundabouts, where other traffic creates variables, parking is entirely within your control.
Advanced Parallel Parking Technique
Setting Up Correctly
The setup determines the outcome. Get this right and the rest follows naturally:
- Distance from the target car: Approximately half a metre to one metre. Too close and you risk hitting them during the manoeuvre; too far and you will end up away from the kerb
- Alignment: Your car should be parallel with the target car, not at an angle. Check by looking along the side of both vehicles
- Position along the car: Your instructor will teach a specific alignment point. Commonly, your left door mirror is aligned with their rear bumper, or your rear wheels are aligned with the back of their car
Steering Amounts
The amount of steering lock you apply determines the angle of your approach to the kerb:
- Standard approach: One full turn of the wheel to the left at reference point 1. This creates approximately a 45-degree angle
- Tight space: You may need slightly more than one turn (one and a quarter turns) to create a tighter angle
- Longer space: Slightly less than one full turn creates a shallower angle — useful when the gap between cars is larger
Reading the Mirrors
Your left mirror is your primary tool during parallel parking:
- When you can see the kerb appearing in your left mirror, you know the rear of the car is approaching the kerb
- When the kerb runs parallel to your car in the mirror, you are parallel to it
- If the kerb is getting closer and closer, you are heading towards it — you may need to straighten or turn right slightly to avoid mounting it
Your right mirror shows you the traffic side. Keep checking it for approaching vehicles. If a car comes, you may need to pause your manoeuvre.
Correcting During the Manoeuvre
If things are not going perfectly:
- Too close to the kerb: Turn the wheel slightly to the right (away from the kerb). If you are about to mount the kerb, stop, pull forward a car length, and start again
- Too far from the kerb: Turn the wheel slightly more to the left (towards the kerb). If the gap is too large, pull forward and reposition
- Not parallel: If your car is at an angle when you stop, pull forward and adjust. This is better than leaving it wonky
Advanced Bay Parking Technique
Choosing Your Bay
On your driving test, the examiner will usually let you choose which bay to use. Smart choices:
- Choose a bay with empty bays on both sides — more room for error
- Choose a bay that gives you a good approach angle — avoid bays in tight corners
- Avoid bays next to large vehicles (vans, SUVs) that block your view
Reverse Bay Parking: The Reference Point System
Your DriveSQ instructor will identify reference points specific to the car you learn in. A common system:
- Drive past your chosen bay. Continue until the third line from your bay reaches a specific point on your car (often the B-pillar or rear passenger window)
- Stop. Select reverse. Full observation check
- Begin reversing, turning the wheel fully in the direction of the bay
- Check both door mirrors — you should see the bay lines appearing equally in both mirrors
- When the car is straight (lines parallel in both mirrors), straighten the wheel
- Continue reversing straight until you are fully in the bay
- Stop. Apply handbrake
Forward Bay Parking
The easier variant but requires a wider turning arc:
- Approach at an angle — Position your car so you have room to turn into the bay. This usually means being further away from the bay than you might expect
- Turn into the bay when the first line of the bay is roughly level with your front wheel
- Straighten up as the car enters, checking mirrors for alignment
- Stop centrally in the bay
Parking in Real Manchester Conditions
Your driving test takes place in controlled conditions, but real-world parking in Manchester is more challenging:
On-Street Parallel Parking
Manchester’s residential streets (Didsbury, Chorlton, Levenshulme, Withington) are lined with parked cars. Gaps are often tight. After passing your test, you will need to:
- Judge whether a gap is big enough (approximately 1.5 times your car length is the minimum for comfortable parallel parking)
- Park while traffic queues behind you — stay calm, indicate, and proceed at your own pace
- Park on hills — remember to turn your wheels towards the kerb when facing downhill, away from the kerb when facing uphill. Apply the handbrake firmly
Multi-Storey and Supermarket Car Parks
Manchester’s multi-storey car parks (Arndale, Trafford Centre, Piccadilly Place) have tight bays, pillars, and poor visibility. New drivers should:
- Drive slowly — car parks have a 5mph advisory limit
- Choose end bays or bays with space on at least one side
- Use reverse parking for easier exit (you have better visibility driving forward out of a bay than reversing out)
- Be aware of pedestrians, especially children, who may be less visible between cars
The Examiner’s Perspective
Understanding what the examiner is looking for helps you focus your practice:
- Control: Can you control the car at slow speed? Smooth clutch, accurate steering, appropriate use of mirrors
- Accuracy: Is the final position reasonably close to the kerb (parallel) or within the bay lines? Perfection is not required — “reasonably accurate” is the standard
- Observation: Did you check all around before and during the manoeuvre? Did you respond to other road users?
- Response to difficulties: If something went wrong, did you deal with it safely? Correcting a mistake calmly is better than completing the manoeuvre badly
DriveSQ Mastery Tip
Practise parking at home between lessons. If you have access to a car and a supervising driver, find a quiet car park and practise bay parking repeatedly. The more repetitions you do, the more automatic the reference points and steering become. DriveSQ learners who practise between lessons typically master parking 5–10 hours faster.
Next Steps
Continue to Chapter 13: Independent Driving & Sat Nav to understand how the independent driving section of the test works and how to follow sat nav directions confidently.