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Manoeuvres

Hill Start — Smooth, Without Rolling Back

How to do a smooth manual hill start, automatic hill start, and what to do if you stall on a steep gradient.

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In short

Manual: find the bite of the clutch, hold the car still on the handbrake, give gentle gas, release the handbrake as the bite firms up, and drive away smoothly. Automatic: brake-hold or hill-assist will keep you still for a moment — gentle gas and go.

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

The manual sequence

Handbrake on, clutch down, first gear. Bring the clutch up to the bite point — you'll feel the nose dip. Add a little gas (around 1500 rpm on a steep hill). Release the handbrake. Continue gentle gas and gradually release the clutch fully.

Automatic hill start

Most modern automatics hold the brake for two seconds when you lift off, giving you time to move your foot to the accelerator. Some have a hill-assist switch. Either way: gentle gas and the car will pull away.

Frequently asked questions

What if I roll back?
Up to about a car length of roll is a control fault, not a fail. More than that and you risk a serious fault, especially with traffic behind. Practise on a gentle incline first.
Can I use the foot brake instead of the handbrake?
On a gentle hill, yes — many examiners accept brake-hold-and-go. On a steep gradient, use the handbrake; it's the safer, examiner-approved method.