Glasgow (Anniesland) Driving Test 2026: Tricky Spots, Route Maps & How to Prepare

Glasgow (Anniesland) Driving Test 2026: Tricky Spots, Route Maps & How to Prepare

If you have booked your driving test at Glasgow Anniesland, you are sitting one of the busiest practical tests in the west of Scotland. Anniesland Cross is a notoriously complicated junction, and the surrounding routes mix urban dual carriageways with quiet residential streets. The good news is that almost every learner failure here comes down to the same handful of mistakes — and once you know what to expect, the test becomes very passable.

This 2026 guide explains exactly what you will face on test day at Anniesland, the tricky spots that catch learners out, the local pass rate, and the routes you should practise before you sit in that examiner’s car.

About Glasgow (Anniesland) Driving Test Centre

Glasgow Anniesland Driving Test Centre is at 20 Herschell Street, Glasgow G13 1HR, just off Crow Road and a short walk from Anniesland Cross. Tests run Monday to Saturday and the centre serves a huge catchment from Knightswood, Scotstoun, Yoker, Jordanhill, Bearsden and Drumchapel.

Parking is on-street and can be tight at peak times, so arrive at least 15 minutes early. Bring your provisional licence, your test confirmation email, and a roadworthy car with L-plates and a working interior mirror for the examiner.

The Routes Around Anniesland

Examiners pull from a varied set of test routes that typically cover:

  • Crow Road — the main artery north towards Knightswood with multiple lanes, bus stops and pelican crossings.
  • Great Western Road (A82) — high-speed dual carriageway sections through Anniesland Cross.
  • Bearsden Road and Switchback Road — popular for independent driving and country-style stretches.
  • Knightswood and Lincoln Avenue — residential 20mph zones with parked cars on both sides.
  • Drumchapel Road — bus lanes, traffic-calming and the dreaded staggered junction at Lyndhurst Gardens.

You will be asked to drive independently for around 20 minutes, usually following the sat nav on a route towards Drumchapel, Bearsden or Hyndland.

Tricky Spots & Common Challenges

Anniesland Cross. This is the make-or-break junction. Five roads meet under traffic lights with filter arrows that change quickly. Watch for cyclists in the bus lane and never drift across the white markings — examiners fail more learners here for poor lane discipline than anywhere else on the route.

Crow Road / Great Western Road merge. Coming off Crow Road northbound onto the A82 requires a confident, well-timed merge. Hesitating or stopping on the slip is a serious fault.

Switchback Road bends. The 40mph limit feels fast for new drivers and the long sweeping bends test your steering control under speed.

Knightswood mini-roundabouts. Two mini-roundabouts in quick succession on Lincoln Avenue catch learners out — give way to the right and signal off cleanly.

Hyndland school zone. Tight residential streets, tram lines on Hyndland Road and lots of pedestrians. Speed control and observation are everything.

Pass Rates & Statistics

Glasgow Anniesland’s pass rate sits around 49% — slightly above the Scottish average of 47% and broadly in line with the national average. Saturday tests are the hardest because of heavier traffic on Great Western Road and the school run feeding into Knightswood. Early morning weekday slots have the best historical pass rates.

Practise Real Test Routes on Your Phone

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.

Top Tips for Passing at Anniesland

  1. Practise Anniesland Cross at least five times. Drive it in different lanes, in different directions, and at different times of day until lane choice is automatic.
  2. Use mirrors before every signal. The examiner is checking that you check — every lane change on Crow Road needs a clear mirror-signal-manoeuvre.
  3. Keep up with traffic on the A82. Under-driving on a 40mph dual carriageway is treated as making no progress.
  4. Look for cyclists. Glasgow has dedicated cycle lanes on many test routes and missing one when you turn left is an instant fail.
  5. Don’t stop on yellow boxes — there are several around Anniesland Cross and Hyndland.
  6. Trust your sat nav. If it tells you to turn left and you can’t, just take the next safe left and the device will reroute. Examiners do not penalise wrong turns, only the way you handle them.
  7. Know your show me / tell me for the demister, lights, and tyre pressures — the examiner will ask before you set off.

How Exam Routes App Can Help

The Exam Routes App holds the most commonly used test routes around Glasgow Anniesland with turn-by-turn navigation. Practise the Anniesland Cross loop, the Drumchapel independent drive, and the Bearsden Road dual carriageway in your own car, in your own time, and you will walk into your test already familiar with every junction, roundabout and tricky pinch point.

Frequently Asked Questions

How hard is the Glasgow Anniesland driving test?

It is moderately challenging. The pass rate is roughly average for Scotland but Anniesland Cross and the busy A82 sections require confident lane discipline and steady speed control.

How early should I arrive at Anniesland test centre?

Aim for 15 minutes early. Parking around Herschell Street fills up quickly and arriving late means losing your test fee.

Are the test routes the same every time?

No. Examiners rotate between several routes and the independent drive section uses different sat nav destinations. Practising a variety of routes is the best preparation.

What is the pass rate at Glasgow Anniesland in 2026?

Roughly 49%, marginally above the Scottish national average of around 47%.

Is the Anniesland Cross junction part of every test?

Most routes pass through or near Anniesland Cross at least once because of its central location, so it is essential practice.

Ready to Pass at Anniesland? Download Exam Routes Now

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.