Florida Graduated Driver's License Guide
Posted: Thursday, March 08, 2007
by Kristin Stancato
Lowest Price Traffic School
The fact is that the crash rate for 16-year-old drivers is 15 times that of those with 4 to 8 years of more driving experience. For this reason, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA) developed a graduated driver's license system.
Graduated licensing is a system that consists of three stages wherein young drivers must meet certain expectations before graduating to the next stage. The purpose of putting young drivers through a staging process is to ensure they are eased into difficult driving situations slowly, as their experience and maturity grow. From a learning permit to full licensure, the teen driver is moved progressively to each stage as they demonstrate responsible driving behavior.
Florida's Graduated Driver's License program became law in July 1996, and in 1997 alone, Florida saw a 9% reduction in fatalities and injury crashes for teen drivers between 15- and 17-years-old. Thus, the benefits of Florida's GDL program are obvious.
Florida teen drivers must progress through three licensing stages: Learner's License, Operational License, and Full License.
To obtain a Learner's License, the driver must do all of the following:
- be at least 15 years old;
- provide a Social Security Number;
- show proof of completion of a Traffic Law and Substance Abuse Education course, or a license from another state, county, or jurisdiction;
- have a legal guardian sign the Parental Consent Form in the presence of the driver license examiner; and
- pass the required written test covering road rules and signs, a hearing test, and a vision test.
The next stage of licensing is the Operator's License. To receive an Operator's License, the driver must:
- be 16- to 17-years-old;
- have held a Learner's License for at least 12 months without any traffic convictions;
- show parent or guardian certification that the driver has had at least 50 hours of experience behind the wheel, 10 of which must have been at night;
- successfully perform a behind the wheel test in the presence of the driver license examiner.
Drivers with an Operator's License, who are 16-years-old, may only drive between the hours of 6 a.m. and 11 p.m., with two exceptions. If the driver is going to and from work, or has a licensed driver who at least 21-years-old in the front passenger seat, he or she may driver outside the restricted times.
Drivers with an Operator's License, who are 17-years-old, are restricted from driving between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m., with the two exceptions listed above.
The Full License is the end goal for young drivers. Once a driver reaches age 18, they may apply for a Full License. For those already holding an Operational License, the driving restrictions will merely fall off. No new testing will need to be completed.
18-year-olds who have never held a driver's license may apply for a Full License as long as they provide:
- two forms of identification;
- a Social Security card, if they have one; and
- proof they completed a Traffic Law and Substance Abuse Education course.
Lowest Price Traffic School provides DMV approved Florida driver education courses required to obtain a Florida learners permit designed for both teens and their parents.
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Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)What happens when a 16 yr old violates the "curfew" rule, (ie drives after 11 pm,) does it result in a traffic violation, a fine, and does the 12 month period (before the full class E driver's license can be obtained) apply here as well?
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