Booking your practical at Reigate driving test centre in 2026? You’ll be tested on a mix of busy A-roads, leafy Surrey country lanes and the tight one-way system that surrounds the town centre. Whether you’re a Reigate local or travelling in from Redhill, Crawley or south London, this guide walks you through the routes, tricky spots and pass rates so you can walk in feeling prepared.
Reigate is one of the smaller Surrey test centres, but its routes are surprisingly varied. Examiners regularly take learners onto the A217 dual carriageway, through the steep climb up Reigate Hill, and around the busy Wray Common roundabout. Add in the 30 mph residential streets and the mini-roundabouts near the high street, and you’ve got a test that demands real all-round skill.
The centre sits just off the A217 close to the town centre. There’s limited parking immediately outside, so most learners arrive in their instructor’s car and use side-street parking on Trinity Square or nearby. Give yourself 15 minutes spare to settle the nerves — the waiting area is small and gets busy on the hour.
Bring your provisional licence (photocard) and your theory test pass certificate number. Your instructor will normally check the car’s lights, tyres and L-plates before you walk in. The eyesight check happens on the forecourt — you’ll be asked to read a number plate from around 20 metres.
Most Reigate routes start with a left or right turn out of Trinity Square, then quickly head towards either the A25 east or west, or up the A217 to the M25 junction. You’ll typically face:
Three areas catch out the most candidates at Reigate.
The Black Horse mini-roundabout: sight lines are short, and learners often hesitate at the give-way line. Examiners want to see you commit when it’s safe.
Reigate Hill descent: coming down towards the town, speed builds quickly. Brake early and select third before the roundabout at the bottom.
The narrow section past the high street: oncoming traffic can squeeze you against parked cars. Slow down, choose your gap, and don’t be afraid to pause.
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.
Reigate’s most recent published practical pass rate hovers around the 50–53% mark, slightly above the GB national average of around 48%. That number masks a wide spread — local instructor-prepared candidates tend to do far better than learners who travel in cold from London. Morning slots between 8:10am and 10:14am have historically had the highest pass rate, partly because traffic is calmer.
Build these into your final two or three lessons before test day:
The Exam Routes App includes documented Reigate test routes with turn-by-turn navigation. You can drive each route at your own pace, see exactly where examiners pause, and review the trickiest junctions on the move. It pairs perfectly with your driving lessons and is especially useful for learners who don’t live locally.
The standard test runs about 38–40 minutes, including the eyesight check, manoeuvre, show me/tell me questions and roughly 20 minutes of independent driving.
They share many roads but Reigate routes lean more on the steep hill and rural lanes, while Redhill is more urban. Both are similar in difficulty — pick whichever you’ve practised at most.
Parallel park, bay park (forwards or reverse) on side roads, and pull-up-on-the-right. Forward bay parks usually happen back at the centre.
Yes, as long as it meets DVSA requirements: dual-rearview mirror, L-plates, valid MOT and insurance covering a driving test.
Mid-morning (around 10:14 or 11:13) usually avoids both the rush hour and the school-run chaos near the town centre.
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.