INSURANCE GUIDE
Driving Instructor Insurance UK
Motor, public liability and professional cover for UK approved driving instructors and their dual-control vehicles.
TL;DR
- ADIs need specialist motor insurance that covers learner drivers using dual-control vehicles - standard motor insurance does not cover this.
- The ADI licence from the DVSA is a condition of trading as an approved driving instructor.
- Public liability covers incidents involving a third party during lessons.
- Some insurers include professional indemnity for ADIs covering teaching method claims - check whether this is included.
Motor Insurance for Driving Instructors
Approved driving instructors (ADIs) use dual-control vehicles to teach learner drivers. A standard car insurance policy does not cover the vehicle when a learner is at the controls during a lesson. ADI motor insurance is specifically underwritten for tuition use and covers the vehicle when being driven by both the instructor and any learner driver during a lesson. The policy also covers the instructor when driving the vehicle outside lesson hours.
ADI Licence Requirements
The Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) approves and regulates driving instructors. An ADI licence (the green badge) confirms that the instructor has passed the three-part ADI qualifying tests and is registered with the DVSA. The ADI licence must be displayed in the vehicle during lessons. Instructors must hold valid ADI registration as a condition of providing paid instruction. Trainee instructors holding a pink badge (PDI licence) operate under different conditions and may need to confirm that their motor insurance covers trainee instructor use.
Public Liability for Driving Instructors
Public liability insurance covers claims by third parties for injury or property damage connected to your instruction business. An accident during a lesson involving injury to a third party outside the vehicle, damage to a third party's property caused by the learner's driving, or an incident at a test centre are examples of covered scenarios. Motor third-party liability covers third-party road traffic claims; public liability covers additional business-related third-party incidents.
Test Centre Incidents
Incidents in test centre car parks or during driving test accompaniment by the instructor may generate claims not covered by motor third-party liability alone. A public liability extension covering test centre activities is worth confirming is included in your combined ADI policy.
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Disclaimer
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute financial or insurance advice. Kaeltripton.com is not regulated by the FCA. Always read policy documents in full before purchasing cover.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can driving instructors use standard car insurance?
No. Standard car insurance covers the named driver or open drivers under the policy terms. It does not cover a learner driver at the controls during a lesson. Using a standard policy for ADI tuition is a misrepresentation that voids the policy and can also constitute an offence under road traffic law. ADIs must hold a specialist motor policy underwritten for tuition use.
Does ADI insurance cover the car when not being used for lessons?
Most ADI specialist motor policies cover the vehicle for both tuition use and private use outside lesson hours. The policy is rated on the dual-use basis. Confirm with your insurer what use categories are included - some policies restrict non-tuition use to social, domestic, and pleasure use only, excluding commuting or other commercial use.
What happens to my insurance if my ADI licence lapses?
Your motor insurance may be conditional on holding a valid ADI or PDI licence. If your licence lapses or is suspended, inform your insurer immediately. Continuing to provide paid instruction without a valid licence and without informing your insurer would invalidate the policy and constitute a regulatory offence.