How Many Chances Are There for the Subject 2 Driving Test?
2 Answers
For the Subject 2 driving test, you have one initial attempt. If you fail, you can retake the test once on the same day. If you do not take the retest or still fail the retest, the current test session ends, and the applicant must reschedule the test after ten days. Within the validity period of the driving skill test permit, the number of rescheduled attempts for Subject 2 and Subject 3 road driving skill tests must not exceed five. If you fail the fifth rescheduled test, the results of other subjects you have already passed will be invalidated. The full score for Subject 2 is 100 points, with evaluation criteria set for failing, deducting 20 points, deducting 10 points, and deducting 5 points. The test is considered passed if the following conditions are met: ① For applicants of large buses, trailers, city buses, medium buses, and large trucks, a score of 90 or above is required; ② For other vehicle types, a score of 80 or above is required. The test items for large vehicles (A1, A2, A3, B1, B2) include: stake test, hill start, parallel parking, single-plank bridge, curve driving, right-angle turn, narrow gate, continuous obstacles, bumpy road, narrow road U-turn, and simulations for highways, continuous sharp turns on mountain roads, tunnels, rainy (foggy) conditions, slippery roads, and emergency handling. The test items for small vehicles (C1, C2) include: reverse parking, parallel parking, hill start (canceled for C2), right-angle turn, and curve driving (commonly known as S-turn) as the five mandatory items (some regions include a sixth item: highway toll card collection).
When I was taking my driver's license test, I noticed that for the Subject 2 exam, each appointment gives you two attempts: one main test and, if you fail, a retake opportunity on the same day. However, if you fail both attempts, you have to reschedule for the next test. Typically, you're allowed up to five appointments during the entire driving test learning cycle. This means you have around ten chances in total (five appointments with two attempts each), but failing all could mean starting over. I remember failing my first test because I couldn't control the speed properly during the hill start—I was so nervous, but luckily, there was a retake. Later, I passed by practicing more on reversing into the parking space. I recommend beginners to simulate test scenarios more often at the driving school to save time and money.