DriveSQ Learning Hub — Free Driving Guides for Manchester Learners|Book Lessons →
PRACTICAL · CHAPTER 13 OF 16

Chapter 13: Independent Driving & Sat Nav

How independent driving works on the UK driving test, following sat nav directions, and making confident decisions. Complete guide for Manchester learners preparing with DriveSQ.

What Is Independent Driving?

Independent driving is a section of the practical driving test where you drive without turn-by-turn instructions from the examiner. Instead, you follow either a sat nav provided by the examiner or road signs to a destination. This section lasts approximately 20 minutes — about half of the total test time.

Independent driving was introduced to test whether candidates can drive safely while making their own navigation decisions. It reflects real-world driving, where you will regularly need to follow sat nav directions or road signs to reach your destination without someone telling you exactly when to turn.

Sat Nav vs Road Signs

Approximately 80% of driving tests use the sat nav for independent driving. The remaining 20% use road signs (following signs to a named destination). Your examiner will tell you which method will be used.

Sat Nav Independent Driving

The examiner provides a DVSA sat nav (TomTom), pre-programmed with a route. It is mounted on the dashboard where you can see and hear it. You follow its directions as you would in normal driving.

Key points:

  • The sat nav shows you the route visually and gives audio instructions (“Turn left in 200 yards”)
  • You can glance at the sat nav screen — brief looks are fine, similar to checking a mirror
  • Do not stare at the screen — your eyes should remain on the road
  • If you miss a turning, the sat nav will recalculate. This is not a fault — the examiner assesses your driving, not your navigation
  • If you are unsure about a direction, it is better to drive safely than to make a sudden dangerous manoeuvre to follow the sat nav

Road Sign Independent Driving

The examiner will give you a destination (e.g., “Follow signs to Stockport”) and you navigate using road signs. This tests your ability to read and follow directional signs while driving safely.

Key points:

  • Look for green direction signs (A-roads) and white direction signs (local roads)
  • Plan ahead — spot the signs early and position yourself in the correct lane
  • If you lose the signs or take a wrong turn, tell the examiner. They will redirect you. Going the wrong way is not a fault

What the Examiner Is Actually Testing

Independent driving is not a navigation test. The examiner is assessing:

  • Can you drive safely while processing navigation information? — Splitting attention between driving and directions
  • Do you maintain your observation routine? — Mirror checks, blind spots, scanning should not deteriorate when you are thinking about directions
  • Do you plan ahead? — Positioning in the correct lane early, signalling in good time
  • How do you handle uncertainty? — If you are not sure which way to go, do you drive safely while figuring it out?
  • Can you make decisions? — Hesitation at junctions because you are unsure of the route is understandable, but dangerous hesitation (e.g., stopping on a roundabout to read signs) is a fault

Tips for Confident Independent Driving

1. Trust the Sat Nav

The sat nav gives instructions in good time. Listen to the audio instruction, glance at the screen to confirm, then focus on your driving. Do not try to memorise the entire route — take it one instruction at a time.

2. Lane Selection Is Critical

The most common fault during independent driving is being in the wrong lane. On Manchester’s multi-lane roads (Kingsway, Princess Parkway, Mancunian Way, the A56), lane selection is crucial. Tips:

  • Get into the correct lane as early as possible
  • Read road markings — they tell you which lane leads where
  • If you are in the wrong lane, continue safely in that lane and the sat nav will recalculate
  • Never make a last-second lane change — this is dangerous and will be marked as a serious fault

3. If You Go Wrong, Stay Calm

Taking a wrong turn is not a fault. Making a dangerous manoeuvre because you took a wrong turn IS a fault. If you miss a turning:

  • Continue driving safely
  • The sat nav will automatically recalculate and give you new directions
  • If following road signs, tell the examiner. They will give you revised directions
  • Do not brake suddenly, do an illegal U-turn, or reverse on a main road to correct your route

4. Practise Your Test Routes

DriveSQ instructors know every test route from every Manchester test centre. During your lessons, we drive the actual routes you may encounter on test day. This means:

  • You will already know the tricky junctions, roundabouts, and lane changes on each route
  • Road signs along the route will be familiar
  • You can focus on driving rather than navigation because the roads are not entirely unfamiliar

Common test centres for DriveSQ learners include Didsbury (Parrs Wood Road), Sale (Marsland Road), Cheetham Hill, and Failsworth. Each has distinct route characteristics and challenges.

Common Independent Driving Faults

  • Staring at the sat nav instead of the road — Glance, do not stare
  • Last-minute lane changes — Changing lanes too late causes dangerous situations
  • Hesitation at junctions — Taking too long to decide because you are thinking about the route, not the traffic
  • Missing mirror checks — Observation often deteriorates when cognitive load increases. Maintain your routine
  • Panicking when lost — Stay calm. Wrong direction = no fault. Dangerous driving because of panic = serious fault
Key Fact

Going the wrong way is not a driving test fault. The examiner assesses your driving, not your navigation. Drive safely at all times, and if you take a wrong turn, let the sat nav or examiner guide you back on route.

Next Steps

Continue to Chapter 14: Driving in Traffic & City Roads to learn how to navigate Manchester’s busy roads, bus lanes, tram lines, and complex urban junctions.

Put Theory Into Practice with DriveSQ

Book your driving lessons with Manchester’s highest-rated driving school. £33/hr — manual or automatic.

WhatsApp 07352 932003