Unlock hazard perception mock tests
Hazard perception mocks are included with the same theory access used for mock tests and revision mode.
- Full hazard perception mock tests
- Weak hazard type feedback
- Dashboard progress from mock results only
Hazard perception mocks are included with the same theory access used for mock tests and revision mode.
The full hazard perception mock runs 14 video clips in order, mirroring the format of the real DVSA test. Your final score, weak hazard types, and reaction profile are tracked in your dashboard after each attempt so you can see exactly where you need to improve.
After your mock, your dashboard shows your weakest hazard types — whether you tend to react late to traffic developing ahead, miss pedestrian hazards, or struggle with junctions. This feedback is more useful than a single score because it tells you what to watch for in future practice sessions. If you are consistently late on one type of hazard, spend time in practice mode on clips featuring that scenario before your next mock.
The pass mark for the real hazard perception test is 44 out of 75. In a full 14-clip mock, that works out to an average of just over 3 points per hazard. Most clips contain one hazard worth up to 5 points, and one clip contains two hazards. Consistently scoring 4 or 5 on each hazard in practice indicates you are clicking early enough. Scores of 1 or 2 suggest you are spotting the hazard but reacting too late.
In the real test, you sit the multiple-choice section first, then the hazard perception section after an optional short break. The hazard perception interface at DVSA test centres uses a mouse click (not a keyboard), and you can only click once per developing hazard — multiple clicks in the scoring window are fine, but patterned clicking across the whole clip will void that clip's score. You will be given a practice session before the real clips begin.