Mini roundabouts are one of the most-feared features of the UK driving test — and one of the most misunderstood. They look like simple painted circles, but they catch out thousands of learners every year because the rules around priority, signalling and positioning are slightly different to a normal roundabout. This 2026 guide explains exactly how to handle a mini roundabout on your driving test, what examiners are looking for, and the common mistakes that cause faults and instant fails.
A mini roundabout is a small, painted circular junction (usually a single solid white disc) where traffic must give way to vehicles already on the roundabout. The Highway Code defines them in Rule 188: you must treat them like a normal roundabout — give way to traffic from the right — but you cannot drive over the central marking unless your vehicle is too large to go around it.
You’ll find mini roundabouts at busy junctions in towns where space is tight. They’re common on residential roads and in areas with parked cars, schools and shops nearby.
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.
You’ll see double mini roundabouts in many UK towns — two painted domes very close together. Treat each one separately. Give way at each, signal for each exit, and look for traffic from the right at each. Plan ahead so your signals are accurate as you go from one to the next. Some areas (Hemel Hempstead’s Magic Roundabout being the famous example) have multiple mini roundabouts arranged in a circle — these are called “ring junctions”. The same rules apply: give way to the right, signal for each move, and stay calm.
Not automatically. The DVSA marks driving over the central dome as a driver fault unless it was unavoidable. Repeated occurrences, or doing it in a way that obstructs other road users, can become a serious fault and lead to a fail. Examiners are realistic — if your vehicle is too long, or a cyclist forced you wide, you won’t be marked down. But cutting the corner because you can’t be bothered to position correctly will cost you.
It varies by test centre. Some routes have one or two; others (like Hemel Hempstead) have many. The Exam Routes App previews the roundabouts on each route.
Yes — always. Signalling left as you reach your exit is what examiners look for, and it helps everyone behind you understand your intentions.
Only if it is unavoidable. Most cars can navigate a mini roundabout without touching the dome. Doing so unnecessarily is a marked fault.
No — you must give way, but stopping when the way is clear is undue hesitation and can be marked as a fault.
They use the same rules but require quicker decisions because of shorter sightlines. With practise they become straightforward.
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