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After Passing · Real World Driving
Motorway Driving
You passed your test. You can legally drive on any UK road — including motorways. No extra test. No waiting period. Just you and roads where traffic moves at up to 70mph. Here is what you actually need to know.
Quick answer
Motorways feel intimidating until you've done them once. Keep left unless overtaking, match speed on the slip road when joining, maintain a two-second gap, and follow all overhead signs — especially a red X.
70
mph — national speed limit on motorways
2s
Minimum following distance — more in wet or poor conditions
3
Lane types — left, middle, right — each with a specific purpose
2hrs
Maximum recommended driving before taking a break
01What makes motorways different
Motorways are not simply faster versions of A-roads. They follow a different set of rules and a different logic. Understanding what makes them distinct is the first step to feeling comfortable on them.
Key differences from other roads
- No pedestrians, cyclists, horses, or powered wheelchairs
- No traffic lights, roundabouts, or right turns
- Entry and exit only via slip roads — no direct junctions
- Multiple lanes moving at sustained similar speeds
- Overhead gantry signs and variable speed limits
- Hard shoulder or emergency refuge areas instead of lay-bys
Fewer hazards but higher speeds means mistakes have larger consequences. The good news is that motorway driving rewards calm, planned, predictable behaviour — exactly what your test trained you to do.
The truth most new drivers discover quickly
Motorways are statistically among the safest roads in the UK per mile travelled. The intimidation is psychological, not proportional to the actual risk. Once you've done your first motorway journey, most drivers find it easier than busy town driving.
02Before you join — preparation
Motorway driving rewards preparation in a way that local driving doesn't. At 70mph, a problem that would be minor at 30mph — low fuel, a tyre concern, uncertainty about your route — becomes a much bigger issue.
Check before you set off
- Fuel — enough for the journey plus a reasonable margin
- Tyres — correct pressure, no visible damage or unusual wear
- Mirrors — correctly adjusted for motorway speeds
- Route — know your junction numbers before you join, not while driving
- Phone — mounted if using for navigation, never held
If you have only recently passed, dual carriageway experience at 60-70mph is useful before your first motorway. The speed environment is similar and will make the transition feel less abrupt.
03Joining the motorway — slip roads
The slip road is where most new drivers feel most anxious. It is also the most important technique to get right, because an error here affects not just you but the vehicles already on the motorway.
The principle is straightforward: use the slip road to reach the speed of traffic already on the motorway, then merge into the left lane when there is a safe gap. You are not waiting for a gap to appear — you are adjusting your speed to create one.
Accelerate on the slip road
Begin building speed as soon as the slip road starts. You need to reach motorway speed — typically 60-70mph — before the merge point. Arriving too slowly makes you a hazard.
Check mirrors and blind spot
Use your left and interior mirror to assess the traffic in the left lane. Check your right
blind spot. You need to know what is there before committing to the merge.
Signal right
Indicate your intention to merge. Vehicles in the left lane may adjust their position or speed to assist — signal gives them the information to do so.
Match speed and merge smoothly
When your speed matches the traffic and a safe gap is available, merge into the left lane with a smooth steering input. Cancel your signal once in the lane.
Establish your following distance
Once in the left lane, set your two-second gap from the vehicle ahead and check your mirrors. You are now on the motorway.
⚠ The two most common slip road mistakes
Too slow: arriving at the merge point significantly below motorway speed forces vehicles behind you to brake, and makes merging into a 70mph stream genuinely dangerous. Stopping: unless there is an absolute obstruction, you should never stop on a slip road. Keep moving and adjust your speed to create the gap you need.
Vehicles already on the motorway have priority — but this does not mean they will always make space. Good mirror use and speed matching is your responsibility. The Mirror Signal Manoeuvre routine applies here exactly as it does in town — the speeds are different, the sequence is not.
Always return here
Middle lane
For overtaking vehicles in the left lane only. You should not remain here when the left lane is clear ahead of you.
Overtaking only
Right lane
For overtaking vehicles in the middle lane only. The fastest lane — return left once the overtake is complete.
Rightmost overtake
Middle lane hogging — staying in the middle lane when the left lane is clear — is considered careless driving under the Highway Code. It causes unnecessary congestion, forces overtaking vehicles into the right lane, and is one of the most common bad habits on UK motorways.
The rule in plain terms
You should be in the left lane unless you are actively overtaking. Once you have passed the vehicle you were overtaking and it is safe, move back to the left. There is no scenario where remaining in the middle lane when the left lane is clear is correct.
Overtaking on the left — known as undertaking — is also to be avoided. In slow-moving queued traffic where lanes are moving at similar speeds, it can happen unavoidably, but deliberately moving left to pass a vehicle that could move out of your way is dangerous and poor practice.
05Speed and following distance
The national speed limit on a motorway is 70mph. This is a maximum, not a target. In poor weather, heavy traffic, or reduced visibility, a significantly lower speed is appropriate and expected.
The two-second rule
- Pick a fixed reference point — a bridge, a road sign, a marker post
- When the vehicle ahead passes it, start counting
- You should not reach that point for at least two seconds
- In rain, double it to four seconds minimum
- In fog or ice, increase further — there is no upper limit on safety
At 70mph, a car travels approximately 31 metres per second. The Highway Code stopping distance at 70mph is 96 metres — longer than a football pitch. The two-second rule ensures you maintain enough space to react and brake without causing a collision.
⚠ Tailgating is dangerous and illegal
Following too closely at motorway speeds removes your ability to react. If the vehicle ahead brakes suddenly, you have no time and no space. Tailgating is classified as careless driving and carries penalties including points and a fine — and at motorway speeds it is one of the fastest routes to a serious fault or collision.
06Smart motorways — what you must know
Smart motorways use technology to manage traffic flow dynamically. They are a significant part of the UK motorway network and have specific rules that differ from traditional motorways. Not understanding them is not a defence — the rules apply regardless.
Three types of smart motorway in the UK
All Lane Running (ALR)
The hard shoulder has been permanently converted to a live running lane. Emergency refuge areas replace the hard shoulder at intervals.
Dynamic Hard Shoulder
The hard shoulder opens as a running lane during busy periods and reverts to emergency use at other times. Overhead signs indicate which applies.
Controlled Motorway
Three or more lanes with variable speed limits shown overhead. The hard shoulder remains for emergency use only — it is never a running lane.
- A red X above a lane means that lane is closed — do not enter it under any circumstances
- Variable speed limits shown in red circles are mandatory, not advisory — treat them like any other speed limit
- If you break down on an ALR motorway, get to an emergency refuge area if at all possible
- If you cannot reach a refuge area, exit the vehicle via the left-hand door and stand behind the barrier
- Switch on hazard lights immediately if you stop unexpectedly
- Call 999 if you are unable to reach safety — do not walk along the live carriageway
The red X is not a suggestion
Driving in a lane marked with a red X overhead sign is a specific offence carrying a fixed penalty and points. Cameras enforce compliance automatically. If you see a red X, move out of that lane immediately and safely — do not wait to see if you can get past whatever the obstruction is.
07Fatigue — the risk motorways create
Motorways can feel easy. Sustained speed, minimal decision-making, long unbroken stretches — these conditions actively work against alertness. The brain receives less stimulation than in town driving and can begin to disengage without you noticing.
The Highway Code is explicit: you should take a break of at least 15 minutes after every two hours of driving. This is not a guideline for long journeys only — fatigue can develop more quickly than most drivers expect, particularly in the afternoon or on familiar routes.
Signs that you need to stop
- Difficulty keeping your eyes focused on the road ahead
- Slower reactions — noticing things later than normal
- Missing signs, exits, or road markings
- Your thoughts drifting significantly from the drive
- Micro-sleeps — brief moments where you are not aware of what you just passed
⚠ Opening the window does not help
Cold air, loud music, and similar measures are not effective countermeasures for genuine fatigue. They may provide brief stimulation but do not restore alertness. The only effective response to fatigue is to stop driving and rest. Use a service station — they exist for exactly this purpose.
08What you must never do on a motorway
Motorways have a specific set of absolute prohibitions. These are not just bad practice — they are offences.
- Reverse — if you have missed your exit, continue to the next one
- Cross the central reservation — this is never permitted
- Drive against traffic — an obvious but absolute rule
- Stop on the carriageway — unless directed by signs, signals, or police
- Walk on the carriageway — if you must leave your vehicle, stand behind the barrier
- Use a handheld phone — illegal on all roads, more dangerous at motorway speeds
- Drive in a lane marked with a red X overhead
- Exceed the displayed variable speed limit
Missed your exit
It happens to every driver at some point. Do not brake suddenly, do not attempt to cut across to the slip road at the last second, and never reverse on the motorway or hard shoulder. Continue to the next junction, leave safely, and reroute. The delay is minor. The risk of the alternative is not.
09Leaving the motorway
Leaving is straightforward — but it requires planning and timing. The mistake most drivers make is leaving it too late to get into position.
Watch for countdown markers
Blue countdown markers — three bars, two bars, one bar — appear 300, 200, and 100 yards before each exit. These are your warning to be in position.
Move to the left lane early
Begin moving left well before the exit — ideally at the one-mile advance warning sign. Late lane changes at motorway speed are a common cause of near-misses.
Signal and enter the slip road
Signal left as you approach the exit. Do not brake on the motorway itself — enter the slip road first, then reduce speed.
Watch your speed on the slip road
After sustained motorway speed, 40mph on a slip road can feel slow. Check your speedometer — speed perception distorts after high-speed driving and 40 will feel like 25.
10Motorways at night
Driving on a motorway after dark introduces a specific set of challenges that daytime driving doesn't prepare you for. Reduced visibility, fatigue risk, and fewer reference points all combine to make night motorway driving a different experience — not necessarily more dangerous, but requiring more conscious management.
What changes at night on a motorway
- Headlights from oncoming traffic on the opposite carriageway can reduce your ability to judge distance and speed
- Lane markings, signs, and hazards are harder to read at the limits of your headlight range
- Fatigue develops more quickly at night — particularly between midnight and 6am
- Debris, animals, and slow-moving vehicles are much harder to spot in advance
- Your perception of your own speed can be less accurate without daylight reference points
Use full beam headlights where there is no oncoming or preceding traffic — on unlit motorway sections this significantly extends your reaction distance. Switch back to dipped headlights as soon as another vehicle is present. Leaving full beam on when following or meeting other vehicles is both inconsiderate and dangerous.
Speed and stopping distance at night
The Highway Code stopping distance at 70mph is 96 metres. Standard dipped headlights illuminate roughly 30-40 metres ahead. This means at 70mph on a dark motorway with dipped headlights, you are travelling significantly faster than your headlights can see. Reducing speed on unlit sections is not overcaution — it is the correct response to the physics involved.
For a full guide to managing visibility, headlight use, and fatigue after dark, see the LearnerDrive night driving guide.
11Common questions
Can I use a motorway immediately after passing my test?
Yes — there are no legal restrictions. However, since 2018 learner drivers with a supervising driver can also use motorways during lessons. If your instructor offered this, you may have some motorway experience already. If not, consider your first motorway journey a calm, low-traffic time — an early weekend morning is ideal.
What should I do if I break down?
On a traditional motorway with a hard shoulder — pull onto it, switch on hazard lights, exit via the left door, stand behind the barrier well away from the vehicle, and call for assistance. On an all-lane running smart motorway, get to an emergency refuge area if at all possible. If you cannot move the vehicle, call 999 immediately — do not wait on the carriageway.
Is it illegal to stay in the middle lane?
Middle lane hogging — remaining in the middle lane when the left lane ahead is clear — is careless driving under the Highway Code. Police can issue fixed penalty notices. The rule is unambiguous: keep left unless overtaking.
Do speed cameras operate on motorways?
Yes — both fixed cameras and average speed cameras operate on motorways, particularly in roadworks and smart motorway sections. Average speed cameras measure your speed between two points rather than at a single location, so maintaining a lower speed briefly at a camera and speeding up afterwards makes no difference.
What is the minimum speed on a motorway?
There is no national minimum speed. However, driving significantly below the prevailing traffic speed when there is no reason to do so — particularly in the right lane — can be considered careless driving and creates a hazard. If you need to drive slowly, stay in the left lane and use hazard lights if your speed drops significantly below normal traffic flow.