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Driving Test Nerves — How to Calm Them

Why driving test anxiety happens, the proven calming techniques that work in 60 seconds, and the long-term fix.

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In short

Driving test nerves are caused by the gap between your perceived competence and the test's perceived stakes. Close the gap by over-preparing on the actual roads you'll be examined on. In the moment, breathe out longer than you breathe in — it triggers the parasympathetic nervous system within about 90 seconds.

Updated 2026-06-06 · 5 min read · By Driving Routes Editorial

Why test nerves happen

Anxiety scales with perceived stakes and uncertainty. You can't change the stakes much — the test is the test. You can collapse the uncertainty by driving the routes you'll be tested on. The brain treats familiar roads as low-risk and the anxiety drops with them.

The 60-second calm-down

Slow breath in for four seconds, slow breath out for eight seconds. Repeat for one minute. Long exhale activates the parasympathetic system and you'll feel your shoulders drop. Use this in the waiting room and again just before pulling away.

The long-term fix

Two weeks of route-based practice. The single biggest predictor of test calm is route familiarity. Drive every published route at your centre, twice — the second drive is when nerves drop.

Frequently asked questions

Should I take beta blockers for driving test anxiety?
Speak to your GP — they may be appropriate for some learners. But the lower-risk fix is route familiarity and the 4-second-in, 8-second-out breath.
What if I freeze during the test?
Pull over safely if you can. Breathe. The examiner will give you a moment. Most freeze episodes resolve in under 30 seconds and don't end the test — they only become a problem if they cause an unsafe situation.