The first year on the road: £3,000-£5,000.
Passing the test is not the end of the spending. New-driver insurance alone is often more than the entire cost of learning to drive. Here is the full first-year picture.
Six lines on the bill.
| Item | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full licence | £0 | £0 | £0 |
| Insurance (17 yr old) | £1,200 | £2,000 | £2,500 |
| Car tax (VED, average band) | £0 | £190 | £735 |
| MOT (year 3+) | £0 | £40 | £54.85 |
| Fuel (~7,000 mi) | £700 | £1,000 | £1,400 |
| Maintenance + breakdown | £200 | £400 | £800 |
| First-year running costs | £2,100 | £3,630 | £5,490 |
Excludes car purchase. Cheapest insurance bands assume telematics (black-box) policy and a low-group car (VW Polo, Hyundai i10, etc.).
The big number drops fast with age.
| Age | Low | Typical | With telematics |
|---|---|---|---|
| 17 | £1,500 | £2,200 | £1,200-£1,800 |
| 18-19 | £1,200 | £1,800 | £900-£1,400 |
| 20-21 | £900 | £1,400 | £700-£1,100 |
| 22-24 | £700 | £1,100 | £550-£900 |
| 25+ | £500 | £800 | £400-£650 |
New-driver penalty
6 points in 2 years and the licence goes.
Under the New Drivers Act 1995, accumulating 6 or more penalty points within 2 years of passing means your licence is revoked. To get it back you have to retake both the theory and practical tests. Speeding, mobile-phone use and minor accidents are the most common causes.
The Pass Plus voluntary scheme adds 6 hours of post-test training (motorway, night, all weathers) and many insurers discount premiums for those who complete it. Costs vary by region: usually £150-£250.