How to start a driving school in the UK
- UK / DVSA
- Solo or school
- 2026
Before you start: qualify as an instructor
To teach learner drivers for money in Great Britain you must be a qualified Approved Driving Instructor (ADI) on the DVSA register. Becoming an ADI means passing the three-part qualifying process: a theory and hazard-perception test (Part 1), a test of your own driving ability (Part 2), and a test of your ability to instruct (Part 3). You will also need an enhanced DBS check. Read the official requirements on GOV.UK, and see our guide to becoming a driving instructor for the detail.
The steps to start your driving school
To start a driving school in the UK you need to qualify as an Approved Driving Instructor (ADI), decide whether to go solo or join a franchise, set up a dual-control car, insurance and payments, price your lessons, and get a booking-ready presence so learners can find you. The steps below walk through each decision and the tools you need to start a driving school in 2026.
- Qualify: pass the DVSA ADI tests and get your green badge.
- Choose your model: solo, franchise, or your own multi-instructor school.
- Set up the essentials: dual-control car, instruction and business insurance, a way to take payments, and digital income records.
- Price your lessons: set an hourly rate and lesson blocks.
- Get found and booked: a branded website with online booking.
- Run it: diary, payments and pupil progress in one place.
1. Decide: solo, franchise or your own school
You can work independently, join a franchise for a fee, or build a multi-instructor school. Going independent keeps more of your income and your brand; a franchise trades a slice of that for ready-made pupils. Many instructors start solo and grow. If you want pupil enquiries without a per-lead fee, our instructor marketplace is included in your subscription.
2. Sort the essentials
You will need a suitable dual-control car, the right insurance (instruction and business cover), a way to take card payments, and basic bookkeeping for Self Assessment. Keep your income, expenses and mileage records digital from day one, see accounting and MTD-ready records for instructors.
3. Set your prices and packages
Research local rates, then decide your hourly price and any lesson blocks. Our guide on how much to charge for driving lessons walks through the numbers.
4. Get found and get booked
You need a professional, booking-ready presence so learners can find and book you. A branded website with online booking turns local searches into paid lessons, and our guide on getting more pupils covers the rest.
5. Run your driving school without the admin spiral
From your first pupil, keep your diary, payments and DVSA pupil progress in one place so growth feels manageable rather than chaotic. See pricing or start a free trial when you are ready.
Everything to run your new school, in one place
Instead of stitching together a diary, a payments app, a website builder and a spreadsheet, DrivoPilot gives a new driving school all of it in one login, so you can spend your time teaching, not on admin.
- A smart diary and online booking from day one
- Payments and clean income records for tax
- A branded website and DVSA progress included