gov.uk/cancel-driving-test. Phone: 0300 200 1122. If DVSA cancels your test, you receive a full credit and priority rebooking with no financial penalty.Life doesn't always cooperate with your test booking. You might fall ill the morning of your test, get called into work at short notice, or realise a few weeks out that you're simply not ready. All of those are valid reasons to cancel β but the timing of your decision makes all the difference to your wallet.
DVSA charges Β£62 for a car practical driving test (Β£75 for evenings, weekends, and bank holidays). That money is only refundable if you cancel with enough notice. Cancel too late, and the fee is gone β even if you have a perfectly reasonable excuse.
Common reasons candidates cancel include:
Whatever your reason, acting quickly is the priority. Every day you wait could mean the difference between a full refund and losing the fee entirely.
The most important rule in the entire cancellation process: you must cancel at least 3 clear working days before your test appointment. Miss that deadline by even a single hour and you forfeit the fee β no exceptions, no appeals.
The phrase "clear working days" catches a lot of people out. It doesn't mean three calendar days. Weekends and UK public bank holidays don't count. The day of the test itself doesn't count either. Neither does the day you cancel.
Here's a worked example. Say your test is booked for Thursday 15 May. You need to cancel so that three full working days fall between your cancellation and the test date.
That means you must cancel by 11:59 pm on Thursday 8 May to get your refund. Cancel on Friday 9 May and you've only cleared three working days β which passes. Cancel on Saturday 10 May and you've missed the window, because Saturday doesn't count.
When a bank holiday falls in that window, push your cancellation deadline back by one extra working day. If Good Friday or Easter Monday sits between your cancellation date and the test date, those days don't count as working days in the calculation.
Visit gov.uk/cancel-driving-test in your browser. This is the only DVSA-authorised portal β don't use third-party websites that charge admin fees.
You'll need your full UK driving licence number (16 characters). This is printed on the front of your photocard licence.
DVSA uses your theory test pass number to verify your identity and match your booking. Have it ready before you start.
Your upcoming tests will appear. Select the practical driving test you want to cancel and confirm the details are correct.
Click to confirm. You'll receive a cancellation confirmation email. Keep that email β it's your proof of cancellation and refund claim.
If you cancelled within the 3-clear-working-day window, a full refund will be credited back to your original payment method within 5β7 working days.
DVSA's refund policy is straightforward β but unforgiving. Cancel with 3 or more clear working days to spare and you'll get every penny back. Cancel with fewer than 3 clear working days and you receive nothing. There's no partial refund, no credit note for a missed deadline.
The refund goes back to the card or payment method you used when you booked. It typically arrives within 5 to 7 working days, though some banks process it faster. If you booked through a driving instructor or school, the refund may go to them rather than to you directly β check this with your instructor before cancelling.
One option worth knowing: if you want to change your driving test to a different date or time rather than cancel outright, you can reschedule instead. Rescheduling keeps your money in the DVSA system β it's applied to the new booking β so you avoid any risk of forfeiting the fee. The same 3-clear-working-day rule applies to rescheduling.
If you're unsure whether enough time remains, don't gamble. Cancel immediately if you know you can't attend. Waiting to see whether you might recover in time (for example, if you're ill) is a costly mistake if you misjudge the window.
If you can't access the internet or prefer to speak to someone, you can cancel your test by calling the DVSA booking line on 0300 200 1122. The line is open Monday to Friday, 8am to 4pm. It's closed on weekends and bank holidays β which matters for your deadline calculation.
When you call, have your driving licence number, theory test certificate number, and booking reference ready. The operator will locate your booking, confirm the cancellation, and tell you whether you're eligible for a refund. Ask them to send a confirmation email β don't rely on a verbal assurance alone.
Be aware that phone lines can be busy, particularly on Monday mornings. If you're cutting it close to the 3-working-day deadline and you can't get through, the online portal is faster and available 24 hours a day.
One situation where the phone option is particularly useful: if you believe your cancellation is eligible for a refund under exceptional circumstances β such as a serious medical emergency β you can speak directly to a DVSA advisor. Exceptional circumstance appeals are rare and not guaranteed, but the phone is the right channel for that conversation.
Not turning up to your test without cancelling is the worst outcome financially. DVSA records it as a no-show. You forfeit the entire fee with no right of appeal under standard policy. You also have to rebook from scratch and pay the full fee again.
There's no grace period for no-shows. Even arriving 10 minutes after your appointment slot may result in the test being forfeited β test centre staff won't wait beyond the appointment window. If you're running late due to traffic or a breakdown, call the test centre directly as early as possible. They may be able to accommodate you, but it's at their discretion.
If you need to find information about driving test cancellations and how DVSA handles them in bulk (for example, due to severe weather or centre closures), that's a separate process covered below.
Sometimes the cancellation isn't your decision. DVSA occasionally cancels tests due to extreme weather conditions, test centre closures, instructor strikes, or technical failures. When that happens, the rules flip entirely in your favour.
If DVSA cancels your test, you are entitled to:
DVSA will contact you by email or text message using the details on your booking. Check your spam folder if you're expecting a notification and haven't received it. If you suspect your test has been cancelled but haven't been notified, log in to your DVSA account or call the booking line to check.
The key point: you're never out of pocket when DVSA cancels. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise. If DVSA claims a cancellation was your fault when you believe it was theirs, you can challenge it through the GOV.UK feedback and complaints process.
Once you've cancelled, you can rebook immediately β there's no mandatory waiting period. The fastest way is through the book your driving test service at gov.uk. You'll go through the same process as your original booking: enter your licence details, choose a test centre, pick a date and time, and pay.
Before rebooking, check two things. First, confirm your theory test pass certificate is still valid β it expires 2 years after the pass date. If it's lapsed, you'll need to book your driving theory test again before you can take the practical. Second, make sure you're genuinely ready. Rebooking too soon after cancelling because you weren't ready just creates the same problem again.
Waiting times for test slots vary significantly by region and time of year. Urban test centres β particularly in London, Manchester, and Birmingham β often have queues of 8 to 14 weeks. Rural centres frequently have slots available within 2 to 4 weeks.
URL: gov.uk/cancel-driving-test
Available: 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
Speed: Instant confirmation
Best for: Most candidates β fastest and simplest option. You receive an immediate on-screen confirmation plus an email. No hold times, no risk of the line being engaged near a deadline.
What you need: UK driving licence number + theory test certificate number.
Number: 0300 200 1122
Available: Monday to Friday, 8amβ4pm (closed weekends and bank holidays)
Speed: Subject to hold times β can take 10β20 minutes during peak periods
Best for: Candidates who prefer speaking to a person, have an unusual situation, or want to discuss exceptional circumstances. Also useful if you're having trouble accessing the online system.
What you need: Driving licence number + booking reference + theory test certificate number.
DVSA provides a booking management service accessible via the GOV.UK website on mobile browsers. There is no dedicated standalone DVSA app for test bookings as of 2026 β be cautious of any third-party app claiming to offer official DVSA cancellations, as these may charge additional fees.
The mobile-optimised GOV.UK portal at gov.uk/cancel-driving-test works on smartphones and tablets and is the safest route for mobile users.
These two options sound similar but they work quite differently. When you cancel, DVSA processes a refund (if you're within the deadline) and your booking is gone. You start fresh β new search, new payment, new slot. The upside is flexibility; the downside is re-joining the queue.
When you reschedule, your fee stays in the DVSA system and is applied to the new booking. You don't need to pay again. The same 3-clear-working-day rule applies β you must reschedule with at least 3 clear working days before the original test date or you lose the fee. The practical advantage of rescheduling over cancelling is that it's typically one or two steps fewer, and there's no interim period where your money is in a pending refund state.
For most candidates who simply need a different date β maybe they want more practice time or have a minor diary conflict β rescheduling is the better choice. Cancelling outright makes more sense if you want maximum flexibility: switching test centres, taking a longer break, or waiting until a specific life situation resolves.
You can reschedule online at gov.uk/change-driving-test or by calling the same DVSA number. The process mirrors the cancellation flow β same identity verification, same portal. If you'd like to read a full guide on the reschedule process, our article on how to change your driving test covers every step in detail.
One of the most practical things you can do after rebooking β especially if your new slot is weeks away β is to use a test cancellation finder service. These tools monitor the DVSA booking system in real time and alert you when a cancellation slot opens at your chosen test centre.
Popular options include Test Match and Driving Test Cancellations (third-party sites β not DVSA affiliated). You set your preferred test centre, date range, and they notify you by text or email the moment a slot becomes available. Many candidates move their test date forward by 4 to 6 weeks this way.
A few cautions: some of these services charge a subscription fee, so compare them before committing. Always book the earlier slot through the official DVSA portal β never hand payment details to a third-party that claims to book on your behalf. And make sure you cancel your original (later) booking once you've secured the earlier one, to avoid paying for two tests.
If you're committed to passing your practical test, combining a finder tool with structured theory test practice in the weeks before your new slot is a smart use of the extra preparation time.
If you've cancelled because you didn't feel ready, treat the extra time as a genuine opportunity rather than a setback. Most candidates who cancel and rebook make significant progress before their second attempt β but only if they use the time deliberately.
Start by identifying the specific areas where you lack confidence. Was it manoeuvres β parallel parking, bay parking, emergency stops? Was it independent driving? Was it nerves affecting your observation at junctions? Knowing the answer shapes what you work on.
Book additional lessons targeting those weak spots specifically. A good instructor won't just repeat the same lesson structure β they'll design practice sessions around the gaps. If you're between instructors, this is also a good moment to reconsider whether your current one is the right fit.
Use the time to stay sharp on the theory side too. The Highway Code changes periodically, and rules around smart motorways, hierarchy of road users, and speed awareness have evolved in recent years. Keeping your knowledge current reduces the chance of surprises on the day.
Candidates who combine strong practical preparation with up-to-date theory knowledge consistently outperform those who treat the two as separate. Everything on the road connects β signal timing, hazard awareness, lane discipline β and your examiner is watching all of it at once.
Several candidates make avoidable errors that cost them money or delay their test unnecessarily. The most common is waiting too long to cancel β hoping the situation resolves itself when cancelling immediately would have secured a refund.
A second frequent mistake is confusing calendar days with working days. People count three days on the calendar, see they're within the window, and cancel β only to discover that a weekend or bank holiday pushed them outside the 3-clear-working-day threshold. Always count forwards from the test date, backward through working days only, excluding the test date itself.
A third error is using unofficial third-party websites to cancel. Some sites mimic the GOV.UK design and charge an admin fee to "process" your cancellation. DVSA doesn't charge a cancellation fee β any site asking for payment to cancel is not legitimate. Always use gov.uk directly.
Finally, some candidates assume a note from their GP or employer will unlock a late refund. DVSA's standard policy doesn't allow for this. Exceptional circumstance claims are considered on a case-by-case basis and are rarely successful. Don't bank on it β act early instead. When in doubt, cancel first and ask questions later.