Driving eyesight requirements
Fri 1st February 2008
Before you start to learn to drive, make sure you are aware of the
eyesight requirements. If you need glasses or corrective lenses to meet
the requirements, it’s a legal requirement that you wear them every
time you drive.
Letting the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) know about eyesight conditions
When applying for your driving licence from the DVLA you should let them know if you have:
* any visual condition which affects both eyes (not including short or long sight or colour blindness)
* any visual condition which affects your sight, (not including
short or long sight or colour blindness), for example, if you have
sight in one eye only
If you have had sight correction surgery you should declare this when you apply for your provisional licence.
* How to tell DVLA about a medical condition
* What happens after you have told DVLA about your medical condition
Eyesight requirements for the practical driving test
Before the practical driving test, your driving examiner will ask you to read the number plate on a stationary vehicle.
The distance requirement for the eyesight test using old style number
plates is 20.5 metres or 20 meters if the new-style number plate is
used. New-style number plates were introduced on
1 September 2001 and are easily identifiable, they start with two letters ie AB51 ABC.
If you can't speak English or have difficulty reading, you may copy down what you see.
You can’t read the first number plate
If you cannot read the first number plate correctly, you will be asked
to read a second number plate, if you cannot read this number plate
correctly, you will be allowed to walk forward until you are just over
the appropriate distance away.
If you still cannot read the number plate correctly, the examiner will
ask you to read a third number plate and will measure the precise
distance from this number plate. The distance will be 20.5 metres if
you are asked to read an old-style number plate and 20 metres if you
are asked to read a new-style number plate.
You can’t read the third number plate
If you cannot read the third number plate correctly, and the examiner
is satisfied that you do not meet the required eyesight standard, you
will fail the driving test, and the practical test will not continue.
This test failure will be marked on the driving test report form (DL25)
with a mark in the Item 1 box. Your interpretation of the number plate
along with the correct one will be written on the back of the form
along with the measured distance.
Wearing glasses/corrective lenses to pass the eyesight test
If you can only read a number plate using glasses/corrective lenses for
the eyesight test, the law requires you wear them whenever you are
driving and throughout your test. You are not allowed to remove your
glasses/corrective lenses when carrying out test manoeuvres (reversing
etc).
If you used your glasses/corrective lenses to read the number plate and
take off/out your glasses/corrective lenses during the practical test,
your examiner will remind you the law requires you to wear them; if you
refuse to wear them, the test will not continue.
If you have broken, forgotten or brought the wrong glasses, you should
tell your examiner at the start of the test. If you do not tell the
examiner and attempt and fail the eyesight test, your test will be
recorded as a failure and the remainder of the test will not go ahead.
Failing the eyesight test
Should you fail the eyesight requirement; the examiner will ask you to
sign a form DL.77 –which acknowledges you were unable to comply with
the eyesight requirements. The examiner (using form DL.77 form) will
notify the DVLA that you did not meet the eyesight requirements and
your licence will be revoked.
To reapply for your licence, send to DVLA an ‘Application for a Driving
Licence’ (D1), available from the DVLA form ordering service or Post
Office® branches. You can also download and complete the medical
questionnaire V1 and return it with your D1 form.
When your application arrives at DVLA they’ll ask the Driving Standards
Agency (DSA) to conduct a separate eyesight test for you at a test
centre. If you’re successful you’ll still have to pass the DSA standard
eyesight test at your next practical driving test.
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