Theory practice

Driving Theory Test Practice (UK)

Practise realistic DVSA-style theory questions by topic, tighten weak areas and build confidence before you move into full mock tests. This is the best place to start if you want steady progress without jumping straight into timed exams.

Use free practice to get moving, then step up to full mock tests, sharpen your timing with the Hazard Perception Guide, and build confidence with the revision hub.

Best way to use practice mode: Start with 10 to 20 questions, focus on the topics you keep missing, then move into timed mock tests once you are consistently scoring above 80%.

Need help?

Quick answers

A few common questions for this page.

What is included with full theory access?

Full theory access gives you unlimited mock tests, realistic exam-style practice, weak area tracking, hazard perception training and progress tools designed to help you pass faster.

Is there a free version?

Yes. You can use free theory practice without paying, but full mock tests, hazard perception training and deeper progress tracking sit inside Theory Pack.

What is the difference between free practice and mock tests?

Free practice is lighter revision that helps you build confidence a topic at a time. Mock tests are timed, more realistic, and designed to show weak areas and exam readiness.

Theory test guide

How to use practice mode to pass your theory test faster

Practice mode works best when it is part of a clear routine: build knowledge by topic, track the areas you keep missing, then move into timed mocks and hazard practice once your scores are consistently strong.

Theory test pass mark

You need 43 out of 50 on the multiple-choice section to pass. Do not aim for 43. Aim to be consistently above it in practice so nerves on the day do not knock you under the line.

The smartest way to build that margin is to start with category practice, then test yourself under timed conditions.

How many questions are in the theory test?

The real test contains 50 multiple-choice questions. That is why full mock tests matter. They build focus, pacing and exam stamina in a way short quizzes do not.

If you only do little bursts of practice, you can feel more prepared than you really are.

How to revise road signs and weak topics

Do not just keep answering random questions. Find the areas you keep getting wrong, then hit them directly. Road signs, stopping distances, junctions and hazard awareness are common weak spots.

That is exactly where smart revision helps because it puts weaker categories back in front of you faster.

How hazard perception scoring works

Hazard perception rewards early recognition of a developing hazard. The more accurately you spot it in the scoring window, the more points you get. Repeated random clicking is not the answer.

The real skill is learning what a developing hazard looks like before it becomes obvious.

Best order to use New Driver Hub

1. Start free practice 2. Check your weak areas 3. Take full mock tests 4. Use smart revision 5. Practise hazard perception