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Typical weekly earnings

Typical weekly earnings working for an established driving school are:

Gross income for 40 hours @ £20 / hour £800
LESS
Franchise Fee to Driving School (includes all car costs and supply of pupils) £200
Inland Revenue / NIC £75
Fuel £75
-------
Net income/week £450

Once you start up on your own, as most ADIs do within a year of qualifying, your net income (£450/week) will increase because your business costs would not be as high as a Franchise Fee (cutting out the "middle man").

A new career - A secure future

 Information Booklet

It's a fact! There are now more cars on the roads than ever before. And the numbers are increasing. So are the numbers of people who need to learn to drive them. With driving regulations becoming ever more complicated and driving tests more complex and difficult to pass, there is a continuous demand for qualified driving instructors and the role is becoming more varied.

This demand could present you with the opportunity to begin a new career as an ADI, an Approved Driving Instructor, and to start your own business or work on a franchise basis for an established driving school.

Driving instruction is not only financially rewarding, it offers a number of employment options. Whether it be in full or part-time employment, self-employment or as a franchise holder, working as an ADI provides independence, flexible working hours and above all, a degree of security that most other careers cannot offer. It also provides job satisfaction particularly after your pupils pass their driving test due largely to your ability as an instructor.

Start up costs for a self-employed ADI are much lower than those for many other types of business so, once you have become qualified, it's relatively easy to get going.

 


 

ORDIT Driving Instructors Associattion Institute of Advanced Motorists Driving Standards Agency The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents
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