
Bring your original ID card and the archived documents from the driving school to the service hall of the municipal vehicle office for an in-person verification. Below are the precautions for Subject Three: 1. Fingerprint Verification: If the examinee's fingerprint verification fails, please exit the vehicle to re-collect fingerprints before rejoining the queue for the test. 2. Below Passing Score: If the examinee's score falls below the passing threshold during the test, the system will automatically prompt the examinee to pull over. After completing the pull-over maneuver, the system will indicate readiness for the next test attempt. 3. Pulling Over: After completing all mandatory test items and traveling more than 3 kilometers, the system will automatically prompt the examinee to pull over. Upon hearing the pull-over instruction, the examinee should independently select a clear curb area along the test route and safely execute the maneuver. Upon completion, the system will announce the test results via voice broadcast.

I suggest you directly contact the driving school instructor or . This situation is mostly due to materials not yet being uploaded to the DMV system. Last week, I helped a friend deal with a similar issue—he had to visit the DMV counter twice before finding out the driving school had missed uploading his road test results. The DMV reviewer told me that if there's no update after three business days, prioritize urging the driving school to complete the documents before visiting the DMV in person to check the progress. Remember to bring your ID and student file number—the service counter can pull up the backend status on the spot. Some encountered system delays, and resubmitting the materials once got them approved.

My cousin just went through this. There are actually two ways to handle it: First, keep pressing the driving school to resubmit the documents—they have access to the vehicle management office's contact group on their phones. Second, check the 12123 traffic management app yourself; the online progress section will show which step is stuck. My cousin's screenshot showed it was on the fifth day of review, so he called the local vehicle management office, provided his ID number, and found out the photo was blurry and automatically rejected by the system. After uploading a clear photo, it was approved in two hours. Nowadays, many test centers use electronic reviews, so incomplete documents won’t be returned—they’ll just sit there.

Don't just wait around, go to the driving school immediately to follow up. A friend from the driving test center revealed that the manual review for Subject 3 must be completed within 72 hours at the latest; any delay is definitely abnormal. Last time when I accompanied a student to the DMV, the lady at the counter gave step-by-step instructions: first check if the signature confirmation sheet from the exam day is complete, then verify whether the exam videos have been fully uploaded in the system. Recently, some students' data got stuck in review because the safety officer forgot to click the confirmation button. Bring your ID card and head straight to the Driving Section on the second floor of the DMV—their computers can check the status in real time.

Driving instructor Lao Wang taught me a trick: first, check if you've received the retake fee payment notice—many students get stuck here. Last year, my review was stalled for two weeks, and when I went to the vehicle office, I found out the retake fee payment receipt wasn't linked. Then, check if the electronic signature on the traffic management app is completed—some people pressed their fingerprint but didn't sign on the tablet. If all else fails, call 12345 and transfer to the vehicle management hotline, provide your exam admission number, and ask them to refresh the data in the backend. Remember, last time, mechanic Xiao Zhang used this trick, and his status was updated the next day.

I also encountered such a frustrating situation when getting my driver's license. At that time, my instructor taught me a three-step approach: first, check the status daily on the Traffic 12123 app; second, keep an eye on the exam notification dates in the driving school group chat; third, if it exceeds five days, go directly to the exam office. Later, I found out it was just a delay in SMS notifications, and my application had actually been approved long before. Don't get stuck on the approval process, the most practical thing is to continue practicing for Subject 4. Last year when the exam center system was upgraded, someone waited a whole month only to find out they needed to confirm their fingerprint in person.


