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👁️ Hazard PerceptionIntermediate8 min

Hazard Perception Scoring

Understand the scoring system to maximize your points

Understanding how the hazard perception test is scored is essential for achieving a good mark. Many candidates lose points not because they can't spot hazards, but because they don't understand the timing required. This guide demystifies the scoring system.

AE

AutoviaTest Editorial Team

Driving Education Experts

Last updated: January 2, 2026Reviewed by AutoviaTest Editorial Team

In This Guide

1. The Points System2. Timing is Everything3. Multiple Clicks Strategy4. The Two-Hazard Clip5. Analyzing Your Practice Scores

1. The Points System

Each hazard has a scoring window that opens when the hazard begins to develop and closes when action is required. Within this window, you can score 5, 4, 3, 2, or 1 points depending on when you click. Early detection = more points. The pass mark is typically around 44 out of 75 available points.

2. Timing is Everything

The key insight is that the scoring window opens before the hazard is obvious. If you wait until you're certain, you've likely missed the high-scoring part of the window. Train yourself to click at the first sign of potential danger. Being slightly early is better than being late.

3. Multiple Clicks Strategy

While you can click multiple times, there's an anti-cheating system. If you click in a pattern or too frequently, the system may invalidate your clicks for that hazard. The ideal approach is 1-2 well-timed clicks when you genuinely see a hazard developing. Never click randomly.

4. The Two-Hazard Clip

One clip always contains two scoreable hazards. Treat this clip carefully - there's more to spot. If you've identified one hazard, keep scanning for the second. Both hazards follow the same scoring rules. Missing the second hazard is a common way to lose points.

5. Analyzing Your Practice Scores

When practicing, review where your clicks landed relative to the scoring window. If you consistently score 0-2 points, you're clicking too late. If some clips show no score, you may be missing hazards or clicking in invalid patterns. Adjust your technique based on feedback.

Key Takeaways

  • The scoring window opens when the hazard begins developing, not when obvious
  • Early clicks score higher (5 points) than late clicks (1 point)
  • Pattern clicking or spam clicking results in zero points for that hazard
  • One clip has two hazards - stay alert throughout every clip

Pro Tips

Aim to click within the first third of the scoring window for maximum points

Practice with official clips that show you the scoring window after completion

If you're consistently scoring 1-2 points per hazard, work on earlier detection

Watch your practice clip scores to identify timing issues

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Waiting until you're absolutely certain - by then you've missed high-scoring opportunities
  • Clicking frantically out of panic rather than responding to genuine hazards
  • Forgetting that one clip has two hazards and relaxing after spotting the first

Related Guides

👁️Complete Hazard Perception Guide🔍Spotting Developing Hazards

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