Taking your practical at Brierley Hill test centre, the centre that serves Stourbridge and the wider Black Country in 2026? You’ll be tested on a demanding mix of urban A-roads, multi-lane roundabouts and the steep gradients that make this part of the West Midlands so distinctive. Use this guide to prepare for the routes, the tricky spots and the local pass rate.
The centre serves learners from Stourbridge, Halesowen, Dudley, Kingswinford and Wordsley. Routes reflect the busy nature of the area, with traffic-heavy sections on the A461 and A491 as well as quieter rural lanes towards Hagley and Pedmore.
The centre is on Brettell Lane, with parking outside and a short walk to the waiting area. Bring your provisional photocard licence and arrive in good time — peak rush-hour traffic on the A461 can be slow.
Eyesight check happens on the forecourt. Make sure your prescription glasses or contacts are on if you wear them; the examiner will fail you on the spot if you can’t read the plate.
Routes commonly leave Brettell Lane onto the A461 and head towards Stourbridge town centre or up into Dudley. Expect to encounter:
The Merry Hill roundabouts: several lanes, complex signage and confused tourists looking for the shopping centre. Choose your lane early and stay decisive.
Hill starts on Brettell Lane: the gradient catches out learners who don’t use the handbrake or who slip the clutch too quickly.
The A491 merge: joining at speed is essential. Don’t crawl onto the carriageway.
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.
Brierley Hill historically posts a pass rate around 43–47%, just under the national average of 48%. The centre’s demanding road network and traffic volume both contribute. Earlier morning slots and mid-week tests tend to perform better, with Friday afternoons frequently the busiest.
The Exam Routes App covers Brierley Hill (Stourbridge) test routes with turn-by-turn navigation. Drive every route, study the toughest junctions and arrive at your test with the local knowledge that turns nervous candidates into confident drivers.
Recent figures place it in the 43–47% range, just under the GB average.
The closest DVSA centre serving Stourbridge is Brierley Hill, on Brettell Lane. Stourbridge itself doesn’t have a separate centre.
Around 38–40 minutes long with a mix of urban A-roads, dual carriageway and one or two rural sections. Independent driving uses sat nav.
Forward or reverse bay park (often at the centre), parallel park or pull-up-on-the-right.
Both have similar pass rates. Brierley Hill has more retail traffic; Wolverhampton has more inner-city congestion. Pick whichever you’ve practised at most.
Stop guessing where the examiner will take you. With Exam Routes you can drive every documented route before test day and walk in knowing exactly what to expect.