Fraserburgh test centre pass rate
The car practical pass rate at Fraserburgh test centre is 59.6% for 2024, +11.6 percentage points above the 48.0% national average.
- Ranked #37 of 75 in Scotland
- 59.6% car pass rate
- 8 routes mapped
Car practical pass rate · 2024
Fraserburgh test centre sits above the 48.0% national average, a +11.6 percentage-point gap.
How it ranks
Map of Fraserburgh test centre
Fraserburgh test centre and its surrounding roads. Tap to explore the live map.
What the 59.6% pass rate at Fraserburgh test centre means
For 2024, 59.6% of learners taking the car practical at Fraserburgh test centre passed. Against the 48.0% figure for the UK as a whole, that is a +11.6 percentage-point gap, enough to place the centre in the upper half of the 75 centres in Scotland.
It is tempting to read a pass rate as a difficulty score, but the relationship is loose. Every examiner in the country marks to the same standard, so a centre's figure mostly reflects the roads around it, the number and complexity of roundabouts, the speed limits, how heavy the traffic runs at test times, and how prepared local candidates tend to be. A higher rate at Fraserburgh test centre is best read as a hint about the local network, not a verdict on your chances.
What you can control is familiarity. Candidates who have already driven the junctions, lane changes and manoeuvre spots an examiner is likely to use walk in calmer and make fewer avoidable faults. We map 8 practice routes around Fraserburgh test centre for exactly that.
Where Fraserburgh test centre ranks
- Pass rate (2024)
- 59.6%
- National average
- 48.0%
- Difference vs national
- +11.6 pts
- Rank in Scotland
- #37 of 75
Read these positions as a feel for the local roads, not a verdict on your chances. A centre in the upper half of Scotland typically reflects quieter, more forgiving roads around it, the marking standard is identical nationwide. The candidates who do best at Fraserburgh test centre are simply the ones who have rehearsed its specific junctions, roundabouts and manoeuvre spots until they feel routine.
Practice routes near Fraserburgh test centre
All 8 routes- 32.2 km · moderateFraserburgh · Route 232.2 km; ~40 min; 15L / 12R; 1.33 km dual carriageway
- 30.5 km · challengingFraserburgh · Route 430.5 km; ~35 min; 11L / 12R; 6.67 km dual carriageway
- 30.0 km · challengingFraserburgh · Route 630.0 km; ~35 min; 5 roundabouts, 8L / 10R; 8.31 km dual carriageway
- 24.5 km · challengingFraserburgh · Route 324.5 km; ~35 min; 3 roundabouts, 2 traffic lights, 14L / 6R; 6.62 km dual carriageway
- 22.6 km · challengingFraserburgh · Route 122.6 km; ~35 min; 3 roundabouts, 9L / 11R; 6.53 km dual carriageway
- 22.3 km · challengingFraserburgh · Route 522.3 km; ~30 min; 1 roundabouts, 1 traffic lights, 8L / 11R; 7.75 km dual carriageway
How to read Fraserburgh test centre's pass rate
A test-centre pass rate is simply the share of car practical tests that ended in a pass over the survey year. It is a useful headline, but it is an average across thousands of different drivers, instructors and test days, so it tells you far more about the centre's catchment than about how you, on your day, will do. Two learners of identical ability can sit the same centre and get different outcomes; the rate smooths all of that into a single number.
The biggest driver of the gap between centres is the road network each one serves. Centres routed onto fast, multi-lane roads and complex roundabouts tend to show lower rates, because there is simply more that can go wrong in the time available; centres built around quieter residential grids tend to show higher ones. The examiners are not stricter in one place than another, they all mark to the same national standard, so it is the roads, the traffic and the local learner mix that move the figure.
That is why chasing the “easiest” centre rarely pays off. The travel time, the unfamiliar roads and the longer wait for a slot usually cost you more than a couple of percentage points on a league table ever buys. The candidates who beat their centre's average are almost always the ones who turned its specific roads into second nature first.
Treat Fraserburgh test centre's 59.6% figure, then, as orientation rather than prophecy: a hint about what the local driving demands, and a prompt to rehearse it. The single number you most influence is your own, and you do that on the roads themselves, not on a chart.
Booking and preparing at Fraserburgh test centre
Book early, practical slots fill weeks ahead at most centres, and, where you can, choose a test time that matches the conditions you have practised in. Then spend the run-up driving the actual roads around Fraserburgh test centre: the roundabouts, the lane changes and the manoeuvre spots an examiner is most likely to use. Familiar roads free up the attention that nerves otherwise eat into, and that is where avoidable faults disappear.
We map 8 practice routes around Fraserburgh test centre and coach you through each one in plain English. Run a route slowly first to learn its layout, then again at a normal pace to build confidence, and the area starts to feel like home ground.
Pass rates at nearby test centres
| Test centre | Distance | Pass rate | vs national | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peterhead test centre | 25.6 km | 56.0% | +8.0 pp | |
| Banff test centre | 31 km | 60.0% | +12.0 pp | |
| Inverurie test centre | 49.8 km | 56.1% | +8.1 pp | |
| Huntly test centre | 54.6 km | 68.8% | +20.8 pp | |
| Aberdeen North test centre | 56.6 km | 53.1% | +5.1 pp | |
| Buckie test centre | 57.7 km | 44.6% | −3.4 pp |
Fraserburgh test centre pass rate, your questions
The car practical pass rate at Fraserburgh test centre is 59.6% for 2024. That is +11.6 percentage points above the 48.0% national average, ranking it #37 of 75 centres in Scotland.
Related
Keep exploring
- Fraserburgh test centre, practice routes & infoFull test-centre guide: location, routes and what to expect on the day.
- UK pass-rate league tableSee how every test centre ranks, highest to lowest.
- Driving test glossaryPlain-English definitions of the terms examiners use.
- The Highway CodeThe rules behind every fault an examiner can mark.
DriveRoutes is an independent study aid and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA). Pass-rate figures are sourced from DVSA statistics published under the Open Government Licence and shown for the 2024 survey year.