Newly licensed drivers who complete an approved driver training course are generally credited with two or three years of driving experience, depending on insurer rules and jurisdictional rating practices. Driver training is treated as a risk-improvement factor because it indicates that the new driver has received structured instruction in vehicle control, traffic rules, defensive driving, hazard recognition, and responsible road behaviour. The credit does not make the driver equivalent to a highly experienced operator, but it may improve rating classification compared with a new driver who has no approved training. Option A is too low for the general credit reflected by the course material. Options C and D overstate the experience credit; completing training does not justify treating a newly licensed driver as if they had four or five years of actual road experience. Brokers must be careful to verify that the course is approved and that proof of completion is available, because insurers will not apply rating credits based only on verbal statements. References/topics: Automobile Insurance; driver training credit, newly licensed drivers, automobile rating, underwriting documentation.
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