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Glasses and Eyesight.
It is illegal to drive with defective eyesight.
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.
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As we get older it is essential that we ensure
our eyes are still up to the job. If in doubt, get your eyes checked,
and get them checked regularly.
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.
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.
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