What to expect at a speed awareness course Speed awareness course teaches offenders how to identify speed limits, the dangers of speeding, the benefits of following the speed limit, the impact of their behaviour on other road users, and how to avoid speeding again.
Speed awareness courses take between 4/5 hours with a break in the middle. They don’t provide food, so you’ll need to bring your own if you wish to eat during the break. Courses are available during the day, evenings and at weekends.
A speed awareness course is an instructor-led session that offers an honest discussion about safe driving. It aims to change your attitude towards speeding and make you a safer driver. Most importantly, it is a theory test refresher.
Speed awareness courses aren’t quite as non-patronising as the providers describe. For starters , it is still a punishment. It’s less severe than a speeding fine, but you do have to ‘sit down, do as you’re told, get it done and move on’.
Your police force doesn’t offer speed awareness courses. If you’re eligible for a speed awareness course, your Notice of Intended Prosecution (the document informing you of a speeding offence), will give you the option and all the relevant information.
This means you may see higher quotes than you’re used to. Speed awareness courses don’t affect your driving licence in any way.
If you’ve been caught speeding, you may be offered a speed awareness course. It’s a discussion about driving habits that aims to change your attitude towards speed and make you a safer driver.
Speed awareness courses - sometimes referred to as driver awareness courses – are for motorists who’ve been caught speeding and want to avoid points on their licence and a fine.
If you’ve been caught speeding, you may be invited to attend a speed awareness course. Here’s what you can expect. Speed awareness courses - sometimes referred to as driver awareness courses – are for motorists who’ve been caught speeding and want to avoid points on their licence and a fine.
You’ll need to bring your driving licence along with you. If you don’t have it, you’ll have to show two forms of ID. If you don’t bring any ID with you, you won’t be allowed to take the course. They're usually run by organisations on behalf of police, like NDORS.
National Speed Awareness Online Course iNSAC. TTC Group is pleased to confirm that, from Monday 6th April 2020, it will be delivering digital classroom-based National Speed Awareness Course (iNSAC) to members of the public who have already booked a place to attend a face-to-face course.
National Speed Awareness Online Course. National Speed Awareness Online Course iNSAC. TTC Group is pleased to confirm that, from Monday 6th April 2020, it will be delivering digital classroom-based National Speed Awareness Course (iNSAC) to members of the public who have already booked a place to attend a face-to-face course.
All face-to-face driver awareness courses were suspended on the 19th March 2020 as a result of guidance from UKROEd. This organisation oversees all police-referred driver offender retraining courses in the UK.
Also, all the content from face-to-face courses can be viewed online through a secure, video link. The technology required to participate is straightforward; a fully-charged laptop, tablet or phone, together with a webcam/in-built camera and good-quality access to the internet.
If you have been caught speeding, you will receive a letter informing you of the consequences. In many cases, you will be able to choose from three options: paying the fine and taking the points, going to court to settle it, or taking a speed awareness course with a slightly reduced fine and no penalty points.
Not every driver caught speeding will be offered the chance to take a speed awareness course, partly because not all police forces subscribe to the programme.
Different police forces use different organisations to provide the speed awareness course, and each charge a different amount, though they typically cost between £80 and £100.
The speed awareness course is a session run by a number of independent companies, including the AA. Although there’s no exam to pass, you have to display a ‘positive attitude’ throughout the course and contribute to group discussions.
Speed awareness courses moved online during the Covid-19 pandemic, so you had to join a video call to participate. Obviously that was necessary at a time in which everyone had to stay at home and meant that you didn’t have to travel to a centre to take the course, which made it a little more convenient.
A course will usually run for about four hours, with some time for a break in the middle of the session. Courses take place throughout the week but also during the evenings and weekends, so you won’t necessarily have to take time off work to attend.
This is a slightly grey area. While any speeding convictions and points must legally be declared to your insurance company (or any potential insurer when getting quotes), the onus is on the insurer to ask about whether you’ve taken a speed awareness course.