LINKS
Here are some useful links (hover your mouse over the name and click):
Book a Theory or Practical Test.
For Pass Plus.
For Driver and Vehicle Licensing.
Looking for Car Insurance?
For Learner Drivers Collingwood Insurance takes a lot of beating. Drive ANY car in Insurance Group 15 or under and worth less than £20,000.
Drive your parents, grandparents, friends or relatives car without any risk to their insurance. Just take out a policy for each vehicle when you need it.
After an inital 28 day policy, further cover can be purchased for period of 7, 28 or 84 days.
What's more, if you log in by clicking on the banner below you will get up to £30 discount courtesy of AFT!

If you're aged 25 or over, take a look here, or here.
But if you're under 25 years old you will find the best deals by contacting certain Insurers directly.
Try Direct Line who offer special deals for young drivers and so do
Tescos, or
Nationwide, or
Churchill, or
LV= Liverpool Victoria.
BUT beware! "PARENTS COMMIT ROUTINE AND UNWITTING INSURANCE FRAUD"
(Driving Magazine: November/December 2007)
Thousands of parents are unwittingly committing fraud by insuring their child's car in their own name.
Parents who do this have been warned that this can lead to claims being declined, leaving the young driver uninsured and possibly facing a driving ban.
A YouGov survey for Zurich Insurance showed that one in ten parents and grandparents who have helped youngsters buy a car have it insured in their name, with the youngster a named driver.
Zurich said that anybody who did this was guilty of 'Fronting' - the insurance fraud of a named driver being the main driver.
Despite this, nearly two-thirds (60 per cent) of parents guilty of 'fronting' to reduce insurance premiums said they did not know the action amounted to fraud.
Scott Clayton of Zurich Insurance said: "They also don't realise it's a false economy. In an accident, an insurer could decline a claim or recover any third-party costs from the child or parents."
And far from helping out a young driver, 'fronting' could even end up getting him or her in more serious trouble.
Mr Clayton explained that if insurers declined a claim, police could then treat the young driver as uninsured, meaning he or she could get six penalty points and an automatic ban for a new driver.