The Thai DLT test day, without surprises.

The DLT booking app, the documents, the six-hour course, and the actual exam day — in English, in order.

Mascot standing in front of a modest Thai government office building, holding a folder of documents, ready for the appointment

Wrong page?

Two other foreigner test-day paths.

Already have a Thai licence and renewing? Use the renewal guide — standard 5-year renewals skip the theory and practical, and the rules-and-safety video can be taken online. Coming from a foreign licence? Use the conversion guide instead.

Mascot holding up a fresh Thai driving licence card with a small calendar bubble overhead marking a circled date and a '+5y' badge.

At a glance

Numbers to remember
  1. Test schedule

    Sticker calendar with two adjacent warm-orange cells highlighted beside a warm-orange pill badge reading '2 days'.

    Day 1 is the pre-test course. Day 2 is theory plus practical.

  2. Theory test

    Sticker desktop monitor showing a question block above four answer buttons, beside a warm-orange pill badge reading '50 questions'.

    Computer-based, in English. Pass mark is typically 45 of 50.

  3. Day 1 course

    Sticker wall clock with tick marks and hour-hand markers, beside a warm-orange pill badge reading '6 hours'.

    Reaction and vision screening, then two video blocks.

  4. Out of pocket

    Sticker wallet with banknotes peeking out and a small stack of coins, beside a warm-orange pill badge reading '฿800 fees'.

    Residence cert, medical cert, and the licence card itself, summed up.

  5. Documents

    Sticker fan of five A4 papers with a small warm-orange dot on the top sheet, beside a warm-orange pill badge reading '5 documents'.

    Passport, residence cert, medical cert, QR code, existing licence.

  6. Residence cert

    Sticker A4 certificate sheet with a warm-orange 'Immigration admitted' stamp at the top and a warm-orange speech-bubble badge reading '1 month'.

    Issued by immigration. Valid for about one month — time it close to your appointment.

Step 1 · Booking

Book through the DLT app before you queue

Plan to book through DLT Smart Queue or the official booking website. Some offices still handle walk-ins for simple services, but foreigner and English-language slots are easier to control when you have a confirmed office, service, date, and QR code.

  1. Mascot holding a smartphone with a 'DLT Smart Queue' app badge floating beside it.

    Install the DLT app

  2. Mascot tapping a phone next to a car icon and a motorcycle icon.

    Pick licence type

  3. Mascot holding a phone with a calendar grid floating beside it, one cell highlighted.

    Book a slot early

  4. Mascot holding a phone showing a clear QR code on the screen.

    Save the QR code

Step 2 · Documents

Bring originals and copies

Counter staff usually want originals to verify and a paper copy to file. Bring both.

  1. Open passport book sticker with a small photocopy sheet peeking out behind it; check-in QR-code intent is covered by the body copy.

    Passport + QR code

  2. A4 paper sticker with a paperclip, three placeholder text bars, and a round warm-orange stamp in the corner.

    Residence certificate

  3. A4 paper sticker with placeholder text bars and a small green medical cross in the corner, with a navy stethoscope floating beside it.

    Medical certificate

  4. Plastic-card driver licence sticker with a navy portrait window and a warm-orange stripe across the top.

    Existing licence (if any)

Before you arrive

Long trousers, closed shoes, sleeves

Offices can turn away candidates in shorts, sandals, or sleeveless tops, especially for the practical test. Treat long trousers, sleeves, and closed shoes as the safe baseline unless your branch says otherwise.

Sticker flat-lay of three garments: a sleeved navy t-shirt with a soft-red collar trim, a pair of long-leg navy trousers, and a low closed-toe sneaker with a warm-orange sole.

Test day · Part 1

Day one: the six-hour pre-test course

First-time licences normally require pre-test training before the exam. Accepted foreign-licence conversions may use the shorter foreigner e-learning path instead. Follow the time printed in your booking and arrive early enough for queueing and document checks.

  1. Mascot sitting on a chair, one foot on a pedal, looking at a green-lit traffic-light panel.

    Reaction & vision

  2. Mascot sitting in a classroom chair watching a wall TV with a road scene and a subtitle bar.

    Three hours of subtitled videos

  3. Mascot sitting in a smaller room watching a TV showing a single speech-bubble icon.

    English-speaker block

Test day · Part 2

Day two: theory plus practical

Exam scheduling depends on the office and the service you booked. Theory normally comes before practical testing. Ask before leaving day one whether your next step is same day, next working day, or a later booked slot.

  1. Mascot at a wooden desk in front of a computer monitor showing a quiz layout with four pastel buttons.

    Theory test, 50 in English

  2. Mascot riding a navy scooter slowly through three orange traffic cones in a zigzag.

    Practical: three short tasks

  3. Mascot sitting on a stool in a photo booth holding up a small printed driver-licence-style card.

    Photo + walk out with card

Same day

Photo, print, walk out with a licence

Once both tests are signed off, you take the licence photo at the counter. The card is printed on site — around 105 THB for a motorcycle licence, around 205 THB for a car licence. Check the spelling of your name and the licence categories on the printed card before you leave the building. Corrections are easier the same day than later.

Sticker scene of a freshly printed Thai driver-licence card with a warm-orange portrait-stripe, a small navy portrait-window, and a warm-orange round stamp impression across the lower corner, with a small flat camera sticker tucked behind the card.
Sticker calendar page with one day-cell marked soft-red and crossed out with a navy X, the next day-cell highlighted warm-orange and circled, and a small warm-orange curved arrow connecting the two — with a tilted clipboard sticker floating in front.

Retest

Retests are usually quick to rebook

If you fail, ask the examiner or counter staff for the office's retest window before leaving. Public guidance treats failed theory retests as a rebooking item rather than a same-day guarantee, and practical retest timing is also local-office dependent.

Office variance

Confirm specifics with your local DLT.

Procedures, fees, and document lists vary by branch and change over time. This guide reflects what most foreign-licence candidates report as of . Verify on the day with your local branch before relying on any single step.

Three different DLT counter-front stickers arranged in a loose triangle — one with a warm-orange awning, one with a navy striped awning, one plain blue — each topped with a distinct small icon (clock, calendar page, and a warm-orange question-mark roundel) to convey that each branch has its own quirks.

Test-day FAQ

What people ask before they show up.

  • Do not assume it will work. DLT foreigner checklists focus on lawful stay, passport details, address evidence, a medical certificate, and the correct licence category, but many offices still expect long-stay-style address proof and may reject short-stay visitors. If you are only visiting, an eligible home licence plus the right International Driving Permit is usually the cleaner short-term route. Ask the branch before booking if your stay status is not clear.
  • Plan for DLT Smart Queue or the official booking website first. DLT public notices route licence services through online queue booking, and the app gives you the office, service, date, and proof to show on arrival. Some offices still handle limited walk-ins, especially for simpler services, but do not rely on that for a foreigner or English-language slot without calling first.
  • Book as soon as your document timing is realistic. English-language and foreigner-handling slots can be limited by branch, while medical certificates and residence evidence have their own validity windows. Leave enough buffer to replace a document if the office says the date, address, or wording is wrong.
  • For the licence card, offices normally capture the card photo during the process. Bring printed photos only if your branch's required-documents screen or staff ask for them. If you are unsure, carry a couple of recent passport-size photos as a low-cost backup, but do not treat them as a substitute for the official documents.
  • Many major offices offer an English-language theory-test option, but the available languages and session times are branch-dependent. Confirm the English slot when you book. The wording can still feel literal, so practising exam-style English phrasing before the appointment is useful.
  • Do not rely on counter staff speaking English. Some foreigner-heavy offices can help in English, but service language varies by branch, desk, and day. Bring a translation app, keep key questions written down, and make sure the test language was confirmed during booking.
  • This is office-dependent. Some practical-test sites allow a suitable roadworthy vehicle for the matching category; others expect you to use the office or training-centre vehicle. Confirm before the day, especially for motorcycles, insurance, registration, and whether the vehicle type matches the licence category you booked.
  • Ask the examiner or counter staff for the retest window before you leave. Failed theory tests are normally rebooked rather than treated as an automatic same-day retry, and practical retest timing depends on the office, queue, and service category.
  • No. FarangDrive is an independent preparation tool for English speakers in Thailand and is not affiliated with the Thai Department of Land Transport. The guide is built from public DLT and government-service materials plus branch-level observations. Your specific office can still differ.

Show up quietly confident.

Walk in with the wording and the numbers already familiar. The DLT day stops feeling like an unknown language.

Mascot holding up a freshly printed Thai driving licence card and giving a thumbs-up, with a soft success-green halo behind them.