FOR EXPERIENCED LEARNERS

Already Have Some Driving Experience?

Here's what your first lesson with Lessons2Drive looks like.

Lessons2Drive
Lessons2Drive Driving School
Ex-VicRoads Licence Testing Officer · Founder, Lessons2Drive
June 2026 · 7 min read

Welcome — and thanks for choosing Lessons2Drive. You're reading this because your first lesson is coming up and you already have some driving experience. This page tells you exactly what to expect from your first lesson with us, what we'll focus on, and how to get the most out of your time. No surprises. No assumptions. Just a clear picture of what's ahead.

You won't be starting from scratch

Whether you've driven overseas for years, had some lessons elsewhere, or learned from a parent or friend — your experience is a genuine head start. You already understand how a car moves, how to read traffic, and how to make basic decisions on the road. That foundation is valuable.

What we'll do in your first lesson is assess exactly where you are against the VicRoads assessment standard — and build from there. We never repeat what you already do correctly. Every minute of your lesson is spent on what actually needs attention.

⚡ From an Ex-VicRoads Licence Testing Officer

"After 1,800+ official drive tests, I can tell you this clearly: experienced learners don't fail because they can't drive. They fail because their habits — mirror timing, shoulder checks, roundabout procedure — were built informally and don't quite match what the examiner is specifically looking for. These are small, fixable adjustments. And they're almost always faster to correct than people expect."

— Chamitha Lokuwithana, Ex-VicRoads Licence Testing Officer · 1,800+ tests conducted

What happens in your first lesson — step by step

Here is exactly what your first lesson looks like — so you arrive knowing what to expect:

1
We pick you up from your chosen location
Your lesson starts from home, school, or work within our service areas. Lesson time begins when we arrive — no travel time wasted.
2
Brief conversation about your experience
Before you drive, your instructor asks about your background — where you've driven, what you're comfortable with, what you're less sure about. This shapes everything that follows.
3
Whiteboard briefing — VicRoads vs what you already know
Before you drive, your instructor explains what VicRoads specifically assesses and how that compares to what you've been doing. You understand exactly what needs adjusting — and why — before you touch the wheel.
4
Assessment drive — we see exactly where you are
You drive while your instructor assesses your current level against the actual VicRoads Drive Test criteria. This gives a precise picture of what's already strong and what specifically needs work.
5
Targeted practice on the specific gaps
We spend the rest of the lesson working only on what needs adjusting. Nothing wasted on things you already do correctly.
6
Honest debrief — exactly how many lessons you need
At the end, your instructor gives you an honest estimate of how close you are to test-ready and how many lessons you'll likely need. No padding. No unnecessary lessons. Just an accurate picture.

The most common habits we see — and how we fix them

These are the patterns that appear most often in experienced learners. None are deal-breakers — but all need addressing before test day:

Mirror checks — right habit, wrong timing
Most experienced learners check mirrors — but at the wrong moment relative to the manoeuvre. VicRoads examiners look for checks at very specific times. A second too late is marked the same as not checking at all.
✓ We teach the exact timing VicRoads examiners look for.
Shoulder checks — missing or too quick
Many informal learners were never shown when and how to do a proper head check. A quick glance that doesn't fully clear the blind spot is marked as a fail. This is one of the most common reasons experienced learners fail their first attempt.
✓ We correct this in the first lesson — faster to fix than most people expect.
Signalling — different from Victorian requirements
Overseas drivers especially often have signalling habits from their home country that differ from Victorian rules. Timing, placement, and cancellation are all assessed. Small differences can result in critical errors.
✓ We cover every Victorian signalling requirement specifically.
Roundabout rules — different from most countries
Australian roundabout give way rules, exit signalling, and lane discipline differ from most other countries. Getting this wrong is an Immediate Termination Error — test ends on the spot.
✓ We practise the exact roundabouts on your test route every lesson.
Speed zones — school zones, transitions, shared zones
Victorian roads have specific speed zone rules that are assessed during the test. Drivers with experience elsewhere often miss these because they're looking for familiar signs rather than Victorian-specific ones.
✓ We cover every speed zone relevant to your specific test centre.

How we structure your first lesson — and why it matters

On your first lesson, we give you a choice. We believe in being upfront about both options — and about which one gets you to your licence faster.

Option 1
Drive first — we observe
You drive straight away and we observe. We then give you feedback on what's right and what needs improving.
What usually happens:
In our experience, every student who chooses this option — regardless of how much experience they have — finds out within the first few minutes that there are things they didn't know they were doing wrong. Things that would fail them in a VicRoads test. We show them clearly, and then we switch to the whiteboard. Some lesson time is lost — but the student understands why the next step is necessary.
Option 2 — Recommended
Whiteboard first — then drive
We spend 30–40 minutes at the whiteboard before you drive — covering everything you need to know about the VicRoads drive test, how it's assessed, and the specific rules most drivers don't know.
Why this works better:
When you understand exactly what the examiner is looking for before you drive, every minute on the road is productive. You're not discovering mistakes after the fact — you're already driving with the right knowledge. In our experience, this approach gets students to test-ready level significantly faster than starting on the road.
What we cover in the whiteboard session
What the VicRoads Drive Test is and how it's marked
What a blind spot is and how to check it properly
Main roads vs side roads — who gives way
Roundabout rules — give way, signals, lanes
Shared traffic lights and right turns
Merging lanes — who goes first
Turning right using a median strip
Mirror checks — what the examiner watches for
Speed zones — school zones, shared zones, transitions
How to be a safe driver for life — not just for the test

In our experience, not a single student we've taught — regardless of how many lessons they've had elsewhere or how many years they've driven — knew all of the above correctly before this session. That's not a criticism. It's simply not something most instructors cover. We cover all of it. Before you drive.

What to bring to your first lesson

Your Victorian Learner Permit — must be with you for every lesson. No permit = no lesson.
Your overseas licence if you have one — it helps us understand your driving background quickly.
Comfortable clothes and flat, closed shoes — flat shoes are best for feeling the pedals properly.
Glasses or contact lenses if you need them to drive.
A bottle of water — lessons are mentally tiring, especially early on.
Your Learner Log Book or the free myLearners app — to record your supervised hours.
Download the official VicRoads myLearners App (free):
Both you and your supervising driver need a free myVicRoads account to start logging drives. The app replaces the paper logbook and is accepted by VicRoads.
For Parents & Supervising Drivers

You are welcome to sit in and observe the first lesson

You don't need to do or say anything — just sit back, watch, and listen. This is one of the most valuable things you can do as a supervising driver. Once we cover the fundamentals, you become your learner's supervising driver for their 120 required hours. Understanding how we teach — and what VicRoads actually requires — means you can reinforce the right habits every time you drive together.

What you'll learn by observing:
✓  How to give calm, clear instructions while supervising
✓  What to watch for as a supervising driver
✓  How to handle situations your learner finds difficult
✓  How to build their confidence without adding pressure
✓  The VicRoads assessment criteria your learner is being prepared for

Just let us know when booking that you'd like to observe — we'll make sure there's room in the car.

Specifically for overseas licence holders

Years of overseas driving experience is a genuine advantage — your car control, road awareness, and decision-making are already developed. The adjustments needed are usually about alignment with specific Victorian rules and assessment criteria, not about learning to drive.

Our instructors have worked with overseas drivers from Sri Lanka, India, the Philippines, China, the UK, the Middle East, and many other countries. We know exactly where the gaps typically appear and address them directly and efficiently.

✓  Victorian road rules explained clearly — and compared to your home country where relevant
✓  No time wasted on things you already know
✓  Honest lesson estimate after your first session
✓  Male and female instructors available

About our car

Our lessons are conducted in a dual-control vehicle — your instructor has their own brake pedal. This is standard for all driving schools. It means you are always safe, and you can drive with full confidence knowing your instructor can intervene at any moment if needed.

The car is clean, well-maintained, and fully insured.

Common questions

Will I have to start from the very beginning?
No. We assess where you are in the first lesson and build from there. We never repeat what you already do correctly — your lesson time is spent only where it's needed.
How many lessons will I need?
It depends on your background and current level. After your first lesson, your instructor will give you an honest estimate. Experienced drivers typically need fewer lessons than complete beginners — but this varies based on which habits need adjusting.
I learned from a parent or friend — will my habits be a problem?
Not a problem — just something to work with. Informal learning builds genuine driving ability, but often misses specific VicRoads assessment requirements. We identify exactly what needs adjusting and correct it efficiently. No judgement — just practical fixes.
I had lessons with another school — do I start over?
Not at all. We assess what you've learned and continue from there. If habits from a previous school don't match the VicRoads standard, we identify and correct them specifically — without dismissing everything you've learned.
Can I choose a male or female instructor?
Yes — both male and female instructors are available. Just let us know your preference when booking via WhatsApp and we'll match you accordingly.
Any questions before your lesson?
Just message us on WhatsApp — 0400 008 706. We're happy to answer anything before you arrive. No question is too small.

We'll see you at your first lesson.
You're in good hands.

304 five-star reviews. Founded by an ex-VicRoads Licence Testing Officer. Every instructor trained to the same insider standard.

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