Bay parking is one of the manoeuvres you could be asked to perform on your UK driving test. This guide covers forward and reverse bay parking with clear steps and the common mistakes that cost learners marks.
Your examiner may ask you to park in a bay at the test centre car park. You’ll either drive forward into a bay and reverse out, or reverse in and drive forward out. You need to finish reasonably within the bay lines, straight and centred.
Step 1: Position your car about one car’s width from the row of bays. Stop when the third bay line from your target is roughly level with your shoulder.
Step 2: Check all around. Mirrors and both blind spots before turning the wheel.
Step 3: Begin reversing. Full lock towards the bay, barely walking pace. Look over your shoulder to watch the car entering the space.
Step 4: Straighten up. When roughly parallel with the bay markings, straighten the wheel and continue reversing until fully in.
Step 5: Final adjustments. Pull forward and adjust if needed — the examiner won’t penalise correcting your position.
The Exam Routes App gives you access to real driving test routes with turn-by-turn navigation. Practise at your own pace and build confidence before test day.
Step 1: Approach slowly. Step 2: Swing slightly wide to give yourself room. Step 3: Steer firmly into the bay, watching both lines. Step 4: When leaving, reverse out carefully with thorough mirror and blind spot checks.
Poor observation — the number one fault. Check mirrors and blind spots every time you change direction. Going too fast — the slower you go, the more control you have. Finishing over the lines — a serious fault. Not correcting when needed — stopping and adjusting is better than finishing in a bad position.
Use reference points your instructor helps you find. Practise in different car parks with varying bay sizes. Practise both forward and reverse since you won’t know which the examiner will ask for.
Can I choose which bay to park in?
The examiner directs you to an area, but you may choose the individual bay. Pick one with space on both sides.
What if there are cars in adjacent bays?
Common and expected. Take your time and use your mirrors.
How many attempts can I have?
You can make adjustments without failing. Excessive shunting may result in driving faults.
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