The Highway Code

The Highway Code | Road Changes for Learner Drivers

The Highway Code

HSA Driving News and Updates

THE HIGHWAY RULE — recent changes for learner drivers and how to adapt smoothly

We track policy updates and convert them into clear, step-by-step practice so your lessons stay aligned with examiner expectations and everyday safety. This page focuses on applying THE HIGHWAY RULE mindset: read the context, predict hazards, act early, and stay calm under pressure.

THE HIGHWAY RULE — what changed and why it matters

At HSA we keep HSA Driving News and Updates practical. Below is a compact, learner-first summary of current rules that affect your booking, lesson mix, and test performance. Each point shows how to apply THE HIGHWAY RULE so you make safer, earlier decisions without second-guessing.

THE HIGHWAY RULE — 10 working days to change or cancel your test

Give a full 10 working days notice to reschedule or cancel without losing your fee. Plan revision and lessons backwards from test day: confirm availability, rehearse weak topics, and lock transport and ID. Early planning prevents last-minute stress and missed readiness checks.

THE HIGHWAY RULE — more time on higher-speed rural routes (some centres)

Expect longer exposure to NSL roads in selected areas. Train speed-to-vision, safe gap selection, bend reading, and progressive braking. Apply the rule: look far, decide early, then act once—no dithering. If you can’t see the exit, you can’t commit to the overtake.

THE HIGHWAY RULE — 20 mph norms in many built-up zones (Wales and local policies)

Built-up areas may default to 20 mph. Scan side roads, schools, hospitals, parked cars, and hidden gateways. Match speed to risk and hold a buffer. Where limits change street-to-street, the rule is: signs inform, context confirms.

THE HIGHWAY RULE — zero tolerance on hand-held phones while driving

Any hand-held use while driving is illegal. Build a zero-distraction ritual: phone away, route previewed, seat-mirror-controls set, and voice navigation prepared before moving. Attention is your primary safety system—protect it every time.

THE HIGHWAY RULE — how your lessons adapt (quick plan)
  • Calendar confidence. Align lesson blocks with test dates so the 10-day rule never catches you out.
  • Rural mastery. NSL pacing, safe gaps, bend setup, and overtakes with clear exit vision.
  • Urban awareness. 20 mph scanning with priority to vulnerable road users and emerging traffic.
  • Zero-distraction ritual. Phone off/away + cockpit checks before every move.
THE HIGHWAY RULE — example lesson flow
PhaseFocusOutcome
Warm-upControls, mirrors, cockpitCalm start; attention anchored
UrbanJunctions, positioning, limitsSign + context accuracy
RuralSpeed-to-vision, bends, overtakesPredictive hazard planning
Test-styleIndependent driveConfident decisions under time pressure

THE HIGHWAY RULE — why staying current boosts real-world confidence

The purpose of HSA Driving News and Updates is to convert policy into progress. When notice periods change, we re-map practice blocks and confirm readiness milestones. When centres add more rural mileage, we introduce vision-led speed, safe overtakes, and bend setup earlier in your course. Where 20 mph limits expand, we teach you to read the street: pedestrians at the kerb, cyclists in the door zone, parked vans masking driveways.

THE HIGHWAY RULE is a habit, not a headline: scan wide, decide early, act once. That is how small adjustments turn into safe, repeatable decisions on test day and beyond. Revisit this page before booking, and ask your instructor to align your next session with the update that impacts you most.

The Highway Code | Road Changes for Learner Drivers

Road Changes for Learner Drivers

Driving Theory Tests

Opening your car door — HSA AUTOMOTIVE NEWS

a simple habit that prevents big problems: use the hand furthest from the door to open it. if you’re in the right-hand seat, reach with your left hand; if you’re in the left-hand seat, reach with your right. this “dutch reach” turns your shoulders and head, guiding your eyes over your mirror and then over your shoulder. the result: you naturally check for cyclists, scooters, and traffic before the door moves.

at hsa, we teach it as part of your cockpit drill: mirrors set, seat and belt secure, then reach across, look, and ease the door. small movement, controlled opening, full scan. it protects riders, protects your door, and shows examiners you think ahead.

why this matters in everyday driving

city streets are busy and quiet bikes are easy to miss. the dutch reach builds a reliable, repeatable check that works in any car, at any time of day. pair it with a final mirror glance and a slow door edge—if in doubt, pause and look again.

learn more and stay current

see the official highway code updates and the government’s summary of changes below. we keep our lesson plans aligned so you’re practising current, real-world standards—not last year’s habits.

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hSA DRIVING SCHOOL LONDON
Road Changes for Learner Drivers
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