Can You Fail The Driving Test For Parallel Parking?

2026-05-30 12:56:43
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2 Answers

Detail Spotter Cashier
Back when I took my driving test, parallel parking felt like solving a Rubik’s Cube blindfolded. My instructor drilled into me that messing up wasn’t an automatic fail—unless I completely botched the spacing or hit something. On test day, I panicked and stopped halfway through, leaving the car diagonally across two spaces. The examiner sighed and said, 'Try again, but this time pretend the curb’s lava.' Spoiler: I touched the lava. What surprised me later was hearing friends pass despite worse attempts—one even mounted the curb but got a 'nice recovery' comment. Location matters; rural test centers seem more forgiving than urban ones. These days, I still hold my breath every time I reverse into a tight spot.
2026-05-31 09:10:35
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Zoe
Zoe
Active Reader Veterinarian
Parallel parking was the bane of my existence when I was learning to drive. I practiced for hours in empty parking lots, using trash cans as makeshift cars, but still managed to clip the curb more times than I care to admit. During my test, my hands were sweating so much the steering wheel practically squeaked. The examiner gave me two tries—first time, I left a solid foot from the curb; second time, I overcorrected and nearly mounted the sidewalk. Instant fail. Turns out, most states dock major points for hitting the curb or being too far out, but some let you adjust once if you catch mistakes early. What saved me on the retest? Watching a YouTube tutorial that broke down the 45-degree angle trick frame by frame—geeky, but it worked.

Funny thing is, now that I drive daily, I avoid parallel spots like they’re haunted. Give me a diagonal space any day. My city’s packed with tight streets though, so I’ve had to grudgingly relearn. The irony? I nailed it last week while some teenager watched—probably their driving instructor making me an impromptu 'what not to do' example. Karma’s a harsh teacher.
2026-06-05 00:56:43
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Can you fail a driving test for going too slow?

2 Answers2026-06-04 05:41:48
I actually had this exact worry when I was prepping for my driving test last year! My instructor kept stressing that being cautious was good, but hesitation could cost me points. Turns out, going too slow isn’t just about speed—it’s about traffic flow and confidence. During my test, I crawled at 15 mph in a 25 zone because I was paranoid about missing a stop sign, and the examiner gently pointed out that I was disrupting other drivers. It didn’t fail me outright, but it docked points for 'lack of progress.' The key is matching the pace of traffic while staying safe. If you’re driving so slowly that you’re causing congestion or hesitation (like not merging properly), examiners see it as a lack of control. I spent weeks practicing on quieter roads to build confidence hitting the speed limit naturally. Funny enough, my second attempt felt smoother because I stopped overthinking every little thing. Another angle—my friend’s sister failed outright for going 10 mph under in a residential area during her test. The examiner said it showed she wasn’t comfortable handling the car’s basic functions. There’s a fine line between caution and incompetence, apparently! Now I always tell new drivers: practice until the speed feels intuitive, not scary. Watching compilations of test routes on YouTube helped me visualize realistic scenarios too.
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