How Much Does Driving Lessons Cost In South Africa

A driving lesson is one of a course of lessons during which a person is taught how to drive a vehicle.

How Much Does Driving Lessons Cost In South Africa

For car lessons, lessons tend to cost between R130 and R200 a lesson. Driving schools or instructors often offer package deals, however – for example, you can buy 10 lessons ahead for a discounted amount (cheaper than you would pay for 10 individual lessons).

How much is a driving lesson per hour in South Africa?

Driving Lessons typically range between R180.00 and R240.00 per hour on light motor vehicles.

The price varies between cities and is influenced by the traveling distance.

Are 20 hours of driving lessons enough?

The average learner needs 20 hours of practice to pass the driving test, in addition to 45 hours of driving lessons.

Once you’ve started learning, ask your instructor for advice about when you are ready to start practicing between lessons.

Can I do driving lessons online?

Online driving education is only a viable solution if you have a licensed and certified online trainer on board.

In most cases, individuals rely on free or parent-taught online courses.

When they do this, they miss out on key expert advice.

Other than that, online driving classes may or may not work for everyone.

How many driving lessons do I need to pass?

The average learner needs 45 hours of driving lessons, in addition to 20 hours of practice to pass the driving test.

However this varies from person to person, so although this is a good figure to use as a benchmark, you should take it at your own pace and not compare yourself to others.

Can I book a driving test without lessons?

Under the RSA’s Graduated Driver Licensing (GDL) scheme, you are required to complete compulsory lessons with an RSA Approved Driving Instructor (ADI) before you can take a test. However, these mandatory lessons alone will not prepare you for your test.

Why are driving lessons so expensive?

Because driving schools make money from charging each instructor a weekly fee to be supplied with work.

Their aim is to take on as many instructors as they can (qualified or not) and make tons of cash.

The problem is that then they need a huge supply of pupils to feed to all the instructors.