Skip to content
Road Test

Does the G Road Test Include Highway Driving in Ontario?

ByAzmaray Nadi·MTO Certified Instructor

Yes, the G road test in Ontario includes highway driving. You will be required to drive on a 400-series highway or expressway and demonstrate skills including merging, maintaining highway speed, lane changes, and exiting. Highway driving is the main difference between the G2 and G road tests.

Key Facts

  • On-ramp acceleration: building speed to match highway traffic before merging
  • Mirror and blind spot checks before merging onto the highway
  • Maintaining a safe following distance at highway speeds
  • Smooth lane changes with proper signaling and shoulder checks
  • Keeping right except when passing

Highway Driving Is a Core Part of the G Test

The G road test is designed to assess whether you are ready for a full, unrestricted Ontario driver's licence. Highway driving is central to that assessment. The examiner will direct you onto a 400-series highway or controlled-access expressway and evaluate how you handle higher-speed driving.

What Highway Skills Are Tested?

The examiner will be looking at specific highway behaviors throughout that section of the test.

  • On-ramp acceleration: building speed to match highway traffic before merging
  • Mirror and blind spot checks before merging onto the highway
  • Maintaining a safe following distance at highway speeds
  • Smooth lane changes with proper signaling and shoulder checks
  • Keeping right except when passing
  • Off-ramp: signaling early, smooth deceleration, not braking on the highway
  • Staying alert and scanning far ahead

How Long Is the Highway Section?

The highway portion is typically one portion of a 30 to 45 minute test. The full test also includes city and suburban driving, similar to the G2. The highway section may last roughly 10 to 15 minutes depending on the route and traffic. The examiner will give you clear directions throughout.

How to Prepare for the Highway Portion

If you have not driven regularly on the highway since passing your G2, dedicated G test preparation lessons are strongly recommended. Instructors will take you on the specific highway sections used by your local DriveTest centre. Common mistakes include accelerating too slowly on the on-ramp, changing lanes too abruptly, and failing to check blind spots at speed.

Related Questions

Road Test

What to Expect on the G Road Test in Ontario

The Ontario G road test is a 30 to 45 minute drive that covers city streets and a highway section. The examiner will assess your observation habits, speed management, lane usage, and highway skills including merging, maintaining speed, and exiting. Passing earns you a full, unrestricted G licence.

Read answer
Road Test

How to Pass the G Road Test in Ontario

The G road test in Ontario includes mandatory highway driving: merging onto a 400-series highway, lane changes at speed, and exiting. You also need to demonstrate advanced manoeuvres and confident handling of complex traffic. The test is approximately 30 minutes.

Read answer
Road Test

What Are the Automatic Fails on the G Road Test in Ontario?

On the Ontario G road test, automatic fails include dangerous actions such as failing to check blind spots before lane changes, not stopping completely at stop signs, and improper highway merging or exiting. Any action that causes the examiner to intervene or that creates an immediate safety risk results in an instant fail.

Read answer
Road Test

Can You Use Your Own Car for the G2 Test in Ontario?

Yes, you can use your own car for the G2 road test in Ontario. The vehicle must be properly registered, insured, and in safe working condition. Alternatively, you can use a driving school vehicle if your instructor accompanies you.

Read answer
Road Test

How Do You Do a Lane Change on the Driving Test?

To do a lane change on the driving test, check your mirrors, signal, check your blind spot with a shoulder check, merge gradually into the next lane while maintaining speed, and cancel your signal. Missing the shoulder check is one of the most common automatic fails on Ontario road tests.

Read answer

Ready to Start Driving?

Book a lesson with Nadi and join 5,000+ students who passed with SafePass.

CallTextWhatsApp