Near Newton Abbot test centre
Mostly steady roads with few demanding junctions, a gentle loop to build confidence.
This is an independent 21.8 km practice loop near Newton Abbot test centre, taking roughly - to drive. It is NOT an official DVSA examiner route, the DVSA does not publish those, but it uses the same local roads and junction types an examiner is likely to choose.
Along the way you'll meet Ashburton Road, Balls Corner, Churchills and Dyrons. Knowing the approach, lane and exit at each one before you arrive is the difference between a planned manoeuvre and a last-second reaction, and last-second reactions are where avoidable faults come from.
On this route you’ll practise multiple roundabouts, dual-carriageway joins, national-speed roads, changing speed limits, residential manoeuvres, busy a-roads, independent driving and sustained concentration. Driving it a few times before your test builds the muscle memory that frees up attention for observation and decision-making on the day.
The loop is anchored by 20 catalogued landmarks, including schools, named junctions, churches and shops, so you can navigate it from recognisable features rather than a memorised turn list. Rehearsing it in this way means that on test day the area already feels familiar, and your attention is free for the traffic rather than the map.
Whatever the route, your practical test follows the same national shape: an eyesight check, a couple of vehicle-safety questions, around forty minutes of general driving, one reversing manoeuvre chosen by the examiner, and roughly twenty minutes of independent driving following signs or a sat-nav. Practising on roads like these is how you make each of those elements feel routine rather than new.
Treat this route as practice, not a script. The value is not in repeating one fixed sequence but in getting comfortable with the road types, speed changes and junction patterns of the area around Newton Abbot test centre, so that whatever order your examiner chooses on the day, none of it is unfamiliar. Drive it a few times, focus on smooth observation and planning, and it becomes one more stretch of road you already know, which is exactly the kind of preparation that turns nerves into confidence.
If you are practising with a supervising driver rather than an instructor, take it steadily: agree the manoeuvre spots in advance, keep to a comfortable pace, and stop to talk through anything that felt rushed. And remember the basics that apply on every road, mirrors before any change of speed or direction, signals in good time, and a following distance that gives you room to react. Those habits travel with you long after the test is passed.
This route helps you practise:
Road mix
These are the real named features along the loop, straight from our route catalogue. Use them to recognise where you are and to anticipate the hazard each one brings, not to memorise a fixed order.
Decide your lane and exit on the approach to each of these, get set up early.
Expect busier traffic, pick-ups and pedestrians around these.
Watch for 20 mph zones, crossings and children near these.
Useful navigation anchors on the loop.
Pedestrian crossings and parked cars are common nearby.
Easy landmarks to navigate the loop by.
Frequent stop-start traffic and pedestrians, keep your speed down.
Multiple roundabouts
Approach in the correct lane, signal on the exit before yours, and keep checking your mirrors as you leave.
Dual-carriageway join
About 1.1 km of this loop is dual carriageway. Build your speed on the slip road, take an effective rearward observation, and merge without forcing other traffic to brake.
Changing speed limits
Limits change across this route (30, 40, 50, 60, 70 mph). Watch for repeater signs and adjust early, examiners mark you down for carrying the wrong speed into a new limit.
Residential streets
Narrow residential roads mean parked cars, pedestrians and reduced visibility. Cover the brake, keep your speed down and be ready to give way.
Navigate by these 20 catalogued landmarks rather than a memorised turn list, an indicative loop, not an official DVSA route.
All Saints Marsh CofE Academy
Start near All Saints Marsh CofE Academy.
Ashburton Road
Continue to Ashburton Road, taking the junction with good observation.
Avenue Church
Continue to Avenue Church.
Balls Corner
Continue to Balls Corner, taking the junction with good observation.
Bearnes Voluntary Primary School
Continue to Bearnes Voluntary Primary School.
Churchills
Continue to Churchills, taking the junction with good observation.
Dyrons
Continue to Dyrons, taking the junction with good observation.
Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses
Continue to Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses.
Mile End Garage
Continue to Mile End Garage.
Murray Volkswagen
Continue to Murray Volkswagen.
Newton Abbot
Continue to Newton Abbot.
Newton Abbot College
Continue to Newton Abbot College.
Railway Inn
Continue to Railway Inn.
Saracen's Head
Continue to Saracen's Head.
South Devon UTC
Continue to South Devon UTC.
St Joseph's
Continue to St Joseph's.
Swan
Continue to Swan.
Upside Bar
Continue to Upside Bar.
Victoria Park
Continue to Victoria Park.
Welcome Stranger
Finish back near Welcome Stranger, completing the loop.
This route is 21.8 km and takes about - to drive at a steady learner pace. It is an independent practice loop near Newton Abbot test centre, not an official DVSA route.