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Instant Fail: 10 Common Mistakes to Avoid on the Michigan Driving Test

You've passed your written test, completed Segments 1 and 2, and logged your 50 hours of practice. The final step—the Michigan behind-the-wheel road test—is finally here. Even drivers who feel confident can fall victim to simple, avoidable mistakes under the pressure of being evaluated by a third-party examiner.

The examiner's goal is to ensure you are a safe, competent, and law-abiding driver. While you can make minor errors, certain actions are considered dangerous and can lead to an immediate failure. By understanding the most common pitfalls, you can consciously practice to avoid them.

1. The Incomplete "Rolling" Stop

This is the most frequent and critical error. A rolling stop, where your vehicle's tires never fully cease their rotation at a stop sign, is a guaranteed way to lose significant points and can lead to an automatic fail.

  • How to Avoid It: Bring your vehicle to a full and complete stop behind the white limit line or crosswalk. Feel the car settle. If it helps, count "one-one-thousand, two-one-thousand" in your head after you feel the car stop.

2. Botching the Off-Street Maneuvers

The Michigan test has a unique off-street portion. The main event here is often parallel parking. Hitting a cone, tapping the curb, or taking too many maneuvers will result in a failure of that portion of the test, and could fail you overall.

  • How to Avoid It: There is no substitute for practice. Find an empty parking lot and set up cones to the approximate dimensions of the test space. Follow a consistent, step-by-step method every time. Go slowly, check all your mirrors, and know when to turn the wheel.

3. Failure to Observe (Mirrors & Blind Spots)

The examiner isn't just watching the road; they are watching you. They need to see constant proof that you are aware of your entire surroundings, not just what's in front of your car.

  • How to Avoid It: Exaggerate your head movements. Before every single turn or lane change, you must perform an obvious head check by looking over your shoulder into your blind spot. Also, make it a habit to scan intersections (left-right-left) and check your mirrors frequently.

4. Failure to Yield the Right-of-Way

This is a major safety violation that can cause an automatic failure. It means you forced another driver or a pedestrian to stop, slow down, or swerve to avoid a collision with you.

  • How to Avoid It: Be patient and defensive. When in doubt, it is safer to yield. This applies to yielding to oncoming traffic on an unprotected left turn, yielding to pedestrians in crosswalks, and understanding the rules at four-way stops.

5. Poor Speed Control

This goes both ways. Driving too fast is an obvious error, but driving excessively slow can also cost you points for impeding the safe flow of traffic.

  • How to Avoid It: Be constantly aware of the posted speed limit. Obey it in good conditions. In the absence of a sign, know the Michigan defaults (e.g., 25 mph in residential areas). Adjust your speed for poor weather.

6. Following Too Closely (Tailgating)

This is an aggressive and unsafe habit that demonstrates poor judgment to the examiner.

  • How to Avoid It: Use the "three to four-second rule" as recommended in the "What Every Driver Must Know" handbook. When the vehicle in front of you passes a fixed object (like a tree), start counting "one-one thousand, two-one thousand, three-one thousand." You should not reach that same object before you finish counting.

7. Hitting or Driving Over a Curb

Whether you are making a right turn, backing up, or parking, striking the curb with your tires shows a lack of vehicle control.

  • How to Avoid It: Know the dimensions of your vehicle. Give yourself adequate space on turns without swinging too wide. When backing up, look over your shoulder and use your mirrors to maintain a straight line.

8. Improper Turning

Clean, correct turns are a fundamental driving skill. Swinging too wide into another lane or cutting a corner too sharply will cost you points.

  • How to Avoid It: For right turns, stay in the lane closest to the right-hand curb. For left turns, turn into the corresponding lane on the new street. Always signal at least 100 feet in advance.

9. Lack of Confidence or Being Too Timid

While examiners expect some nerves, being overly hesitant can be dangerous. Indecisiveness at an intersection can confuse other drivers and lead to unsafe situations.

  • How to Avoid It: The best cure for nerves is experience. The more you practice, the more confident you will become. Trust in your driver's ed training and make safe, decisive actions.

10. Not Following Instructions

The examiner will give you clear, simple directions like "take the next left" or "parallel park." Failing to follow them, either due to nerves or not paying attention, will result in lost points.

  • How to Avoid It: Listen carefully to each instruction. If you are unsure what the examiner said, it is perfectly fine to calmly ask, "Could you please repeat that?" It's much better to clarify than to make a wrong move.

By being mindful of these common mistakes during your practice drives, you can build the safe habits needed to ace your Michigan driving test.

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