From repeated failures to finally getting my Dubai driving license
Jun 10, 2026 · 5 min read
Today I finally got my Dubai driving license after almost 2 months of classes, assessments, parking tests, failures, retries, and one final RTA road test.
Hopefully this helps someone.
My Journey
- Passed theory test on April 7
- Internal Assessment #1 failed
- Internal Assessment #2 failed
- Internal Assessment #3 passed
- Internal Parking Tests passed
- RTA Smart Yard failed (Garage Parking)
- Garage Parking Retry failed
- Garage Parking Retry #2 passed
- Final RTA Road Test passed (First Attempt)
I got my license through Excellence Driving School, Al Qusais. One thing I would strongly recommend is taking classes from the same center where you plan to take the test. Over time, you become familiar with the roads, roundabouts, junctions, common test routes, and local traffic patterns, which helps a lot on test day.
The entire process took me almost 2 months.
I work from home, so I had the flexibility to attend classes during weekdays and book sessions whenever slots were available. I think that helped me progress faster and take tests while the lessons were still fresh in my mind.
At one point I genuinely thought I might never finish.
I failed my first internal assessment because I missed stop signs and made mistakes at roundabouts.
I failed the second internal because my speed was too low, my overtaking wasn't proper, and I wasn't making decisions confidently enough.
After another round of classes, I finally passed on the third attempt.
Then came parking.
I passed all internal parking tests and thought the hard part was over.
Then I failed garage parking.
Twice.
That was probably the most frustrating part of the entire journey because I was failing the same maneuver while passing everything else.
After more practice, I finally passed garage parking on my third attempt.
Then came the final RTA road test.
By this point, I had failed enough times that I stopped worrying about failure and focused only on driving safely.
The Biggest Lesson
The RTA road test is not about perfect driving.
It is about proving that you can safely judge live traffic without making other road users react unexpectedly.
The examiner is asking one question:
Can this person drive alone safely, predictably, and without disturbing traffic?
They are not testing perfection.
They are testing judgment.
Your target is:
Safe. Smooth. Decisive. Predictable.
What Helped Me
1. Stop worrying about the outcome
The moment I stopped thinking "I need to pass" and started thinking "I need to drive safely", everything improved.
2. Exaggerate your observations
Examiners cannot read your mind.
They need to SEE your observations.
- Visible mirror checks
- Visible shoulder checks
- Visible junction observations
Move your head.
Don't just move your eyes.
3. Confidence matters
At one point during my journey, a comment from an instructor made me seriously doubt whether I would ever pass.
That completely affected my confidence and made me second-guess myself during tests.
Ironically, the examiner during my final RTA road test was extremely calm and professional.
That taught me an important lesson:
Confidence doesn't mean aggression.
Confidence means making safe decisions without constantly second-guessing yourself.
The more I focused on driving safely instead of worrying about the result, the more confident I became.
4. Stop signs matter more than you think
A lot of my failures came from:
- Stop signs
- Stop lines
- Rolling stops
At stop signs:
- Full stop
- Count 2-3 seconds
- Then move
Even if the road is completely empty.
5. Parking tip that finally helped me pass garage parking
Steering actions should be fast, but the car should move slowly.
Many learners do the opposite.
They move the car too fast and turn the steering too slowly.
For parking tests:
Fast hands. Slow car.
That one change made a huge difference for me.
My Final Test
I booked a Sunday morning slot at 6:10 AM.
Personally, I think it was a great choice.
Traffic was lighter and the roads were calmer.
The route included:
- Residential roads
- 60 km/h roads
- 80 km/h roads
- Lane changes
- Roundabouts
- Parking
I was not perfect.
I even missed a couple of indicators and took a little longer when asked to park.
But I stayed calm, followed the rules, and kept driving.
The examiner was relaxed, professional, and did not make the situation stressful.
There were two other candidates in the car with me.
All three of us passed.
A few minutes later I received the SMS:
"Congratulations, You PASSED your road test."
Final Advice
If you're struggling right now:
- Read every failure report carefully
- Fix one issue at a time
- Don't obsess over mistakes during the test
- Don't confuse nervousness with inability
- Stay calm after mistakes
The best drivers are not perfect. They are predictable.
If you make one mistake:
Reset.
Your next action is independent.
Don't stack mistakes.
Keep going.
Eventually, if you keep fixing one problem at a time, you'll get that SMS too.
See you on the road.