The Ultimate New Brunswick Driving Test Cheat Sheet: Pass With Confidence
Your New Brunswick road test is the final step to getting your licence. For that crucial last-minute review, this "cheat sheet" boils down the most important rules, maneuvers, and numbers into an easy-to-scan guide. Use this to walk into your test feeling prepared and confident.
New Brunswick by the Numbers: Critical Data to Remember
Your examiner will expect you to know these numbers from the New Brunswick Driver's Handbook. Getting them right shows you're a safe and knowledgeable driver.
- 50 km/h: The maximum speed limit in any city, town, or village unless otherwise posted.
- 80 km/h: The standard speed limit on any highway outside of cities and towns unless otherwise posted.
- 3 seconds: The recommended following distance in good weather.
- 30 metres: The minimum distance you must signal before making a turn or changing lanes.
- 6 metres: You may not park within 6 metres of a crosswalk or an intersection.
- 5 metres: The minimum distance you must park from a stop or yield sign.
- 3 metres: The minimum distance you must park from a fire hydrant.
- 150 metres: The distance at which you must dim your high beams when approaching an oncoming vehicle.
- 60 metres: The distance at which you must dim your high beams when following another vehicle.
Key Maneuvers: What Your Examiner Expects
Your road test is a demonstration of your vehicle control. Practice these core skills until they feel automatic.
Parallel Parking
This is a required and heavily scrutinized part of the test.
- Position: Pull up next to the front car/marker, about 1 metre away.
- Reverse: Look over your shoulder. Back up slowly. When your rear wheels are even with the rear of the other car, turn your wheel fully to the right.
- Straighten: When your car is at a 45-degree angle to the curb, straighten the wheel and continue backing in.
- Final Turn: When your front bumper clears the rear of the other car, turn the wheel fully to the left.
- Center: Straighten out. You must be within a reasonable distance of the curb. Do not hit the curb.
Three-Point Turn
This tests your ability to turn the vehicle around in a narrow space.
- Signal right, pull over, and stop.
- Signal left, check traffic in both directions (mirrors and shoulder check), and turn the wheel fully left. Move forward until you are near the opposite curb.
- Shift to reverse. Turn the wheel fully right. Look behind you (360-degree check) and back up slowly.
- Shift to drive. Check traffic again, and accelerate smoothly into your lane.
Hill Parking
- Uphill with a curb: Turn your front wheels AWAY from the curb (left).
- Downhill with a curb: Turn your front wheels TOWARD the curb (right).
- No curb (uphill or downhill): Turn your front wheels TOWARD the edge of the road (right).
- Always set your parking brake firmly.
Lane Changes
Follow the routine every single time.
- Signal: Signal your intention.
- Mirrors: Check your rearview and side mirror.
- Shoulder Check: Perform a physical head check into your blind spot. This is mandatory and a common failure point.
- Move: When safe, move smoothly into the next lane.
Automatic Fails & Critical Errors
These are actions that will likely result in an immediate failure of your road test.
- Any Dangerous Action: Causing another driver or pedestrian to take evasive action.
- Examiner Intervention: If the examiner has to physically grab the wheel or give you a strong verbal warning.
- Speeding: Exceeding the speed limit by a significant margin.
- Failing to Stop: Rolling through a stop sign or not stopping for a school bus with flashing red lights.
- Lack of Observation: Repeatedly failing to perform shoulder checks or scan intersections properly.
- Losing Control of the Vehicle: This includes mounting or bumping the curb hard during a parking maneuver.
This cheat sheet is your guide to the key testing points. The best preparation is to combine this knowledge with hours of real-world practice. Stay calm, drive safely, and you'll be well on your way to earning that New Brunswick Class 5 licence. Good luck!