Intensive Driving Course Pricing UK 2026: Per-Day + Per-Course
Last verified: May 2026
UK intensive driving courses compress the DVSA-recommended 45 hours of professional tuition into 1 to 4 weeks of concentrated lessons, typically priced GBP800 to GBP2,000 plus the DVSA test fee (GBP62 weekday, GBP75 weekend). This page goes deeper into the pricing structure: per-day rates, semi-intensive vs full intensive, the test slot premium, residential vs daily formats, refund risk, and what UK consumer law says about course finance.
How intensive course pricing is built
An intensive driving course price is made up of three main components:
- Tuition hours. Typically 20-45 hours of one-to-one ADI instruction, compressed into a 1-4 week window. This is the largest single cost item, broadly priced at the ADI hourly rate (GBP30-50/hr depending on UK region) with a small premium for the scheduling efficiency.
- Test booking premium. Operators usually book your DVSA practical test slot for you, which means they need an available DVSA test centre slot in your course window. In high-demand UK areas (London, Bristol, Brighton, Cambridge) this can mean booking 16-24 weeks ahead. Operators often charge a premium for guaranteeing a slot is available within the course week.
- Accommodation (residential courses only). Residential intensive courses bundle accommodation into the price, typically GBP200-500 extra. Daily intensive courses do not include accommodation.
Typical UK intensive course price bands by format
| Format | Hours of tuition | Typical UK price | Includes test fee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Semi-intensive (1-2 lessons/day, 2-3 weeks) | 20-30 | GBP650-1,200 | Usually no |
| Daily intensive (4-6 hours/day, 1-2 weeks) | 25-40 | GBP900-1,800 | Varies |
| Full intensive (6-8 hours/day, 1 week) | 30-45 | GBP1,100-2,000 | Varies |
| Residential intensive (with accommodation) | 30-45 | GBP1,400-2,500 | Often yes |
Indicative ranges drawn from RAC, AA and MoneyHelper public commentary plus operator-published pricing (RED, intensivecourses.co.uk, Pass Me Fast). Not a precise series. London and South East courses sit at the upper end; North East, Scotland and NI at the lower end.
Semi-intensive vs full intensive
The semi-intensive format (1-2 lessons per day over 2-3 weeks) costs less per hour because the operator does not need to commit an ADI to your single learner for 6-8 hours per day. It also avoids the cognitive overload that some learners experience in a full intensive format. The trade-off is elapsed calendar time: 2-3 weeks instead of 1.
The full intensive format (6-8 hours per day, 1 week) suits learners who can take a week of annual leave, have a pressing reason to pass quickly (a job offer requiring a driving licence), and are confident they can absorb 6-8 hours of new instruction per day. It is the most expensive format per hour but the shortest in calendar time.
The test slot problem
The DVSA1001 statistical data set publishes per-test-centre waiting times. In high-demand areas (London, Bristol, Brighton, Cambridge) waiting times often run 16-24 weeks. This means an intensive course book in mid-May would typically have a test slot in mid-October to mid-November at the earliest. Operators often manage this by booking your test slot first and arranging the course backwards from there.
If you have already booked your own DVSA practical test slot (separately, through gov.uk/book-driving-test), you can sometimes save on the operator's test slot premium by booking a course in the week before your test. Confirm this in writing before paying.
Residential vs daily intensive courses
Residential intensive courses bundle accommodation (typically a hotel or guesthouse near the instructor's base) into the headline price. This is useful for learners who live a long distance from where they want to take the test, but adds GBP200-500 to the total cost. Daily intensive courses do not include accommodation; you go home each evening. Pick the format that matches where you live and where you want to test.
Refund risk and what to ask before paying a deposit
Five questions to ask any intensive course operator before paying a deposit:
- Is the DVSA practical test fee included in the headline price, or paid separately? Get this in writing.
- What happens if the operator cannot secure a DVSA test slot in my course window? Is there a refund or a free re-booking into a future course?
- What happens if I fail the practical test at the end of the course? Are extra lessons or a retake included, and if so on what terms?
- What happens if I am ill during the course week? Can the course be rescheduled, and at what cost?
- Is the operator a Limited company registered with Companies House? If so, what is their company number? You can verify on the Companies House register.
Finance and instalment plans
Some intensive course operators offer instalment payment plans or buy-now-pay-later finance partnerships. If the finance involves interest or a credit check, the operator is offering a regulated consumer credit product and the lender must be FCA-authorised. The FCA Register is the authoritative way to verify a lender's status.
Buy-now-pay-later products are subject to evolving UK consumer credit regulation. The MoneyHelper service publishes guidance on what to check before entering a BNPL agreement for a driving course or any other purchase.
Bottom line
Intensive driving courses cost GBP800-2,000+ in the UK in 2026 depending on format, region and whether the DVSA test fee is bundled. The format is most useful for learners with a defined reason to pass within a defined window. The cost-per-hour is broadly similar to weekly lessons at typical ADI hourly rates (GBP30-50/hr); the premium you pay is for scheduling concentration, slot booking management, and (for residential) accommodation.
What to read next
- Intensive driving courses: how they work and when they make sense
- DVSA practical test fee and format
- How the UK driving school brands compare
- UK regional cost differences for lessons
- How we sourced the numbers on this site