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👁️ Hazard PerceptionIntermediate12 min

Complete Hazard Perception Guide

Master the skills needed to spot hazards and score high

The hazard perception test assesses your ability to identify developing hazards while driving. It's a crucial skill that goes beyond the test itself - these abilities could save lives on the road. This guide explains the test format, scoring system, and techniques to help you excel.

AE

AutoviaTest Editorial Team

Driving Education Experts

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

In This Guide

1. Understanding Hazard Perception2. Test Format Explained3. Scoring Window System4. Types of Hazards5. Scanning Techniques6. Practice Effectively7. Common Patterns

1. Understanding Hazard Perception

A hazard is anything that causes you to change speed, direction, or stop. A developing hazard is one that requires you to take action. Static hazards (parked cars, road signs) are always present. Developing hazards emerge and require response. The test measures how quickly you spot developing hazards.

2. Test Format Explained

You'll watch video clips from a driver's perspective. Each clip contains at least one developing hazard. One clip has two hazards. Click when you spot a hazard developing. You can score 0-5 points per hazard depending on how quickly you respond. Total available points typically around 75, with pass mark around 44.

3. Scoring Window System

Scoring works on a window system. The window opens when the hazard starts developing and closes when action becomes necessary. Early clicks in the window score 5 points, decreasing to 1 as the window progresses. Clicking after the window scores 0. Multiple clicks don't help - systematic clicking patterns score 0.

4. Types of Hazards

Common hazards include: pedestrians stepping out, vehicles emerging from junctions, cyclists moving into your path, vehicles braking ahead, children near roads, road works, animals, and weather-related hazards. Learn to scan systematically for all hazard types.

5. Scanning Techniques

Use a systematic scanning pattern: far distance, middle distance, near distance, then mirrors. Check the sides of the road for potential hazards. Look for clues that suggest hazards (school signs, parked ice cream vans, ball bouncing into road). Anticipate what could happen next.

6. Practice Effectively

Use official practice clips to understand the format. Practice commentary driving - verbalize hazards as you see them. When watching the clips, imagine you're actually driving. Don't practice bad habits like clicking continuously. Aim for one or two well-timed clicks per hazard.

7. Common Patterns

Certain scenarios appear frequently: pedestrians at zebra crossings, cars at junctions, cyclists swerving around parked cars, emergency vehicles approaching, buses pulling out, schools and playgrounds. Recognize these patterns quickly.

Key Takeaways

  • Click when a hazard starts developing, not when it's already dangerous
  • Use systematic scanning: far, middle, near, and sides of the road
  • One well-timed click per hazard is better than multiple random clicks
  • Practice with official clips to understand timing and scoring

Pro Tips

Practice commentary driving as a passenger to develop hazard awareness

Look for clues in the environment that suggest potential hazards

If you see something that might develop, click early rather than late

Stay focused throughout each clip - hazards can appear anytime

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Clicking too late when the hazard is already obvious to everyone
  • Click-spamming which results in zero points for that clip
  • Losing concentration during clips and missing hazards entirely

Related Guides

📊Hazard Perception Scoring🔍Spotting Developing Hazards

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