University life in Manchester gives you something most working professionals desperately wish they still had — flexible time. Between lectures, seminars, and the occasional 11am start, your weekly schedule has natural gaps that are perfect for fitting in driving lessons. Once you graduate and start working nine-to-five, those gaps disappear completely.
Learning to drive while you are a student is also significantly cheaper in the long run. Post-graduation, you will be juggling rent, commuting costs, and career demands. Right now, your living costs are likely subsidised by student finance, and your time is more adaptable. A 10-hour block at £330 is far easier to budget for when you are already managing a student loan than when you are trying to save for a deposit on a flat.
There is also the practical advantage of graduating with a full driving licence. Many graduate jobs — particularly in sales, consulting, social work, teaching, and healthcare — either require or strongly prefer candidates who can drive. Having your licence before you even start applying puts you ahead of other graduates who left it too late.
Manchester is one of the best cities in the UK to learn to drive as a student. The road network around the university corridor gives you exposure to dual carriageways, residential streets, busy junctions, and multi-lane roundabouts — all within a short drive of campus. You will be test-ready faster because you are practising on genuinely varied roads every lesson.