How to Use Your Mirrors Effectively on Your Driving Test in 2026

How to Use Your Mirrors Effectively on Your Driving Test in 2026

Ask any DVSA examiner what separates a confident learner from a nervous one and the answer is almost always the same: mirror use. Poor observation accounts for more driving test failures than any other category — and the irony is that the fix is simple. You don’t need new skills. You need a habit. This 2026 guide explains exactly when to use your mirrors, how to use them, and the small adjustments that show the examiner you are in full control of the car.

Why Mirror Use Matters So Much

Examiners can’t read your mind. The only way they know you are aware of what’s behind and beside the car is by watching your eyes and head move to the mirrors. Glance at the mirror without moving your head and the examiner won’t see it. The DVSA marking sheet has a dedicated section called “Use of Mirrors” and faults here can stack up quickly.

In 2026, the DVSA continues to fail roughly 1 in 6 candidates for poor observation, including mirror use. The number has barely changed in a decade — which tells you most learners simply don’t practise this enough.

The Mirrors You’ll Use

  • Interior mirror — the rear-view mirror clipped to the windscreen. Shows traffic directly behind you.
  • Left door mirror — shows traffic to your left and behind.
  • Right door mirror — shows traffic to your right and behind, including overtaking vehicles.

Adjust them before you set off. The interior mirror should frame the rear window with the horizon roughly in the middle. The door mirrors should show a sliver of your own car at the inside edge — that gives you the right reference point for distance.

The MSM (or MSPSL) Routine

Every driving school in the UK teaches some version of Mirror, Signal, Manoeuvre — often expanded to Mirror, Signal, Position, Speed, Look. The order matters. Mirrors come first, before any signal or change of speed.

So before you:

  • Change lane → check mirrors first.
  • Slow down or speed up → check mirrors first.
  • Turn left or right → check mirrors first.
  • Pull away from the kerb → check mirrors first.
  • Move out around a cyclist or parked car → check mirrors first, including the right-side door mirror.

The shorthand is simple: if you’re about to change anything about the car’s behaviour, mirrors come first.

The “Six-Point Check” When Pulling Away

When pulling away from the kerb or a parked position, examiners want to see a thorough check:

  1. Left door mirror.
  2. Forward.
  3. Interior mirror.
  4. Right door mirror.
  5. Right blind spot (over your right shoulder).
  6. Forward again, then signal and pull away if safe.

This six-point check is one of the easiest ways to bank early credit on the test and signal to the examiner that you understand observation.

Practise Real Test Routes With Mirror Drills

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.

The Mistakes That Cost Marks

Glancing without moving your head. The examiner can’t see a quick eye flick. Move your head a noticeable amount.

Checking the mirror after you signal. Order matters. Signal-then-mirror suggests you decided before you checked.

Forgetting the right door mirror when pulling away or moving out around a cyclist.

Over-checking under stress. Mirror-staring while drifting in lane is just as dangerous as not checking at all. Quick, deliberate glances are the gold standard.

Skipping mirrors on bends or hill crests. A change of road conditions is a change of plan — check before you adjust speed.

How to Practise Mirror Use

  1. Talk through your mirror checks aloud for the first few practice sessions: “interior mirror, right mirror, signalling right.” Hearing yourself builds the habit.
  2. Have your instructor or supervising driver count your mirror checks for ten minutes. Aim for at least one before every action.
  3. Drive a route you don’t know — uncertainty makes you concentrate harder on observation.
  4. Watch dashcam videos of test passes and pay attention to how often the head turns.
  5. Use the Exam Routes App to practise on real test routes with sat-nav prompts. Each junction is a chance to drill the mirror routine.

What Examiners Are Really Watching

Examiners aren’t trying to fail you. They are trying to confirm you are safe to drive without a supervising driver. The way they confirm it is by watching for evidence of constant observation — and mirrors are the most visible evidence. If your head moves to the mirrors before every action, you bank credit you can’t lose.

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I check my mirrors on the driving test?

Before every action — change of speed, change of direction, change of lane, pulling away. As a rule of thumb, every 8-10 seconds in steady traffic.

Will I fail for not checking my blind spot?

If a hazard exists in the blind spot, yes. Always check it when pulling away or changing lane on a multi-lane road.

Should I check mirrors on a roundabout?

Yes — check before entering, and again before changing lane or signalling off.

How can the examiner tell I’m checking the mirror?

By watching your eyes and head. A small head movement makes the check visible. A quick eye glance with no head movement looks like nothing.

Is mirror-staring a fault?

Yes — looking too long means you’re not watching the road ahead. Quick, deliberate glances are what examiners reward.

Build the Mirror Habit That Passes — Get Exam Routes App

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.