logo
Learner drivers who had vehicles seized for driving unaccompanied hit 6,500 in 2024

Learner drivers who had vehicles seized for driving unaccompanied hit 6,500 in 2024

BreakingNews.ie18-06-2025
The number of learner drivers who had vehicles seized or impounded after being caught driving unaccompanied last year rose by 28 per cent to almost 6,500.
However, just 24 motorists were issued with summonses in 2024 for the offence of allowing a learner driver to drive on the public road without being accompanied by a full licence holder.
Advertisement
New figures published by the Department of Justice reveal that a daily average of 18 learner drivers had their vehicles taken off the road in 2024 – a total of 6,483.
Figures so far this year indicate similar levels of detection with 3,157 cases recorded up to June 4th, 2025.
However, a road safety group has expressed concern about the seemingly low level of enforcement of the offence of driving unaccompanied by learners in some rural counties, despite increased detection rates.
The figures, which are based on the Garda PULSE system, indicate that approximately four out of every 10 drivers caught for such an offence manage to avoid having their vehicle seized.
Advertisement
Learner drivers in Dublin are far more likely to have their vehicles seized than any other part of the country with just 23 per cent of those detected driving unaccompanied being allowed to retain their vehicle.
The figures, which were provided in response to a series of parliamentary questions by Social Democrats TD, Aidan Farrelly, indicate that more than 60 per cent of such offenders in Clare, Galway, Kerry and Waterford/Kilkenny avoid having their vehicle seized.
They also reveal that the overall number of learner drivers who were issued with a €160 fine after being detected driving unaccompanied last year increased by 20 per cent to 10,579.
No information was available on how many also had penalty points attached to their licence.
Advertisement
One Garda division – Dublin West which covers areas including Lucan, Clondalkin, Finglas, Ballyfermot and Blanchardstown – accounted for 14 per cent of the national total last year with 1,516 unaccompanied learner drivers caught by local gardaí.
The next highest numbers were detected in Dublin North (968) and Waterford/Kilkenny (649).
The lowest number of such offences were recorded in Sligo/Leitrim (133), Donegal (137), Dublin East (209), Mayo/Roscommon/Longford (265) and Kerry (283).
Detection rates were up in 18 of the 21 Garda divisions with annual increases in excess of 50 per cent in Dublin North Central, Dublin South Central, Donegal, Kerry and Sligo/Leitrim.
Advertisement
Meath/Westmeath and Clare/Tipperary were the only two Garda divisions to record a decrease in the number of unaccompanied learner drivers fined last year, while the number was unchanged in Louth/Cavan/Monaghan.
Separate figures from the Courts Service also show that only 886 individuals were convicted for driving a vehicle while not being accompanied by a full licence holder last year
The chairperson of road safety group PARC, Susan Gray, said the most alarming aspect of the figures on unaccompanied learner drivers was the seemingly low level of enforcement in rural parts of the country.
'Donegal gardaí only seized 151 vehicles in 29 months; Sligo/Leitrim – 136 and 218 in Kerry over the same period,' said Ms Gray.
Advertisement
While official figures indicate that over 24,000 fixed charge notices were issued to unaccompanied learner drivers between January 1st, 2023 and June 4th, 2025, Ms Gray said there was no information about how many fines were paid and how many offenders had penalty points applied to the driving licence via the Department of Transport's driver file database.
'A lot more questions must be answered to see the full extent of the problem,' said Ms Gray.
Concern has also been expressed that the sharp increase in the number of learner drivers having their vehicles seized in the past 18 months is linked to long-waiting times for driving tests.
Commenting on the figures, Mr Farrelly said it was important to bear in mind that not every learner driver who had been detected and sanctioned for driving unaccompanied chooses to be in that position.
The Kildare North TD said he believed the figures might be linked to backlogs in the number of learner drivers waiting to sit their driving test with an estimated 100,000 applicants still waiting for a test in May.
Ireland
Taoiseach wants 'review' of Leaders' Questions int...
Read More
'Many learner drivers have made great efforts to secure a driving test and I feel that some of what we are seeing here is the prevailing manifestation of backlogs at test centres,' he added.
According to the Road Safety Authority, the annual number of driving tests has increased by 61 per cent since 2021 to 253,850 last year.
The RSA announced an action plan last month which aims to reduce driving test waiting times from 27 weeks to 10 weeks by early September.
The latest RSA figures indicate the average waiting time for a driving test currently stands at just below 19 weeks.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Palestinian challenges Garda decision not to investigate claim Israeli settlers renting cabins on his land
Palestinian challenges Garda decision not to investigate claim Israeli settlers renting cabins on his land

BreakingNews.ie

time2 hours ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Palestinian challenges Garda decision not to investigate claim Israeli settlers renting cabins on his land

A Palestinian man who lives in the West Bank has taken an action against the Garda Commissioner for refusing to investigate a complaint alleging that Israeli settlers barred him from his land . He also claims the land was used to build cabins, which were then advertised for rent on an Irish-registered website. Advertisement The court ordered that the applicant cannot be named after he claimed his life would be under threat from the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF). He is joined in the application by Palestinian rights group Sadaka, the Ireland Palestine Alliance Limited, against the Commissioner of An Garda Síochána. The applicants allege that the actions of the Irish-registered website in allowing the property to be booked constitute a crime. The initial complaint to gardaí in August 2024 alleged the website was an alleged accessory to the crime of transfer, accessory to the crime of appropriation and money laundering. Advertisement The applicants seek a High Court order quashing an alleged February 2025 decision by gardaí not to proceed with an investigation into the matter. In papers lodged to the court by lawyers for the two applicants, it is claimed that the cabins located in the Occupied Territories on land owned by the man were still being advertised online for rent as of May 2025. In an affidavit dated May 8th, 2025, Gerry Liston, a solicitor at KOD Lyons, representing the applicants, claims he himself booked a stay at one of the cabins and printed off the website booking as evidence. It is claimed by the applicants that in the late 1990s, the man was barred from accessing his lands by the Israeli Defence Forces, and that this situation still exists. Advertisement Papers lodged to the High Court claim that his inability to access the lands led to decay across various areas, a trend that persisted until 2004 when Israeli settlers began construction on the land. It is claimed that the pace of construction increased in 2009 when two cabins were erected and advertised as rental properties online, which the applicants claim led to 'settlers profiting from the illegal construction on privately-owned Palestinian land' without the consent of the applicant. In November 2024, gardaí wrote to the applicants saying that an assessment of the complaint had taken place and that 'following careful consideration, it has been determined that there are no offences disclosed within this jurisdiction and therefore a criminal investigation is not warranted'. Last February, gardaí responded to follow-up correspondence saying that the matter was closed but that 'the information, however, has been recorded for intelligence purposes by the Garda National Economic Crime Bureau'. Advertisement A reply letter to gardaí from the plaintiffs said the suggestion that there was no evidence of a crime having been committed in Ireland was 'not a sound basis upon which to decline to investigate' and submitted that gardaí had made an error in law. It is submitted that the three allegations could be investigated under Section 3 of the Geneva Convention, Section 7 of the International Criminal Court Act and also under Ireland's Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Act. At the High Court this week, James B Dwyer SC, for the plaintiffs, applied to Ms Justice Marguerite Bolger that the man not be identified. Ms Justice Bolger granted the order and adjourned the matter to October.

Man (60s) dies and woman (60s) seriously injured in Westmeath collision
Man (60s) dies and woman (60s) seriously injured in Westmeath collision

BreakingNews.ie

time3 hours ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Man (60s) dies and woman (60s) seriously injured in Westmeath collision

A man in his 60s has died, and a woman, also in her 60s, has been seriously injured in a two-car collision in Ballinalack, Co Westmeath. The incident occurred on the N4 at around 4.20pm on Wednesday, July 9th. Advertisement The road is currently closed for a technical examination by Forensic Collision Investigators, and local diversions are in place. The male driver of one of the cars was brought to Midland Regional Hospital, Mullingar, where he was later pronounced dead. The female driver of the second car (60s) was brought to Midland Regional Hospital, Tullamore, for treatment of serious injuries. No other injuries were reported. Gardaí have appealed to anyone who may have witnessed the collision to contact them. Any road users who may have camera footage, including dashcam, and were travelling in the area between 3.30pm and 4.30pm on Wednesday are asked to make their footage available to investigating gardaí. Anyone with information is asked to contact Mullingar garda station on (044) 938 4000, the garda confidential line on 1800 666 111, or any garda station.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store