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Graduated Driver Licensing, Explained: From Permit to Full License

Updated July 2026 · 6 min read

Quick answer: Graduated driver licensing (GDL) is the three-stage system every US state uses to license new drivers: a learner's permit (supervised driving only, with required practice hours), an intermediate license (solo driving with restrictions like night curfews and passenger limits), and finally a full license. Your supervised practice hours are the core requirement of stage one.

Why GDL exists

New drivers crash more — not because they're reckless, but because driving skill is built through exposure, and every early mile carries risk. GDL manages that risk by phasing in privileges: you get experience in low-risk, supervised conditions first, then earn independence gradually. It works. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the most comprehensive GDL programs — a 6-month minimum permit period, an early night restriction, and a one-passenger limit — are associated with roughly a 38% reduction in fatal crashes and a 40% reduction in injury crashes among 16-year-old drivers.

Stage 1: The learner's permit

You pass a written knowledge test and receive a permit that lets you drive only with a licensed supervising adult — typically a parent, guardian, or instructor meeting your state's age and experience rules. Two requirements govern this stage:

The permit stage is where DrivePath lives: it loads your state's exact hour requirements, logs each supervised drive with its conditions, and produces the DMV-ready log you'll certify at the end.

Stage 2: The intermediate (provisional) license

Pass your road test and you can drive alone — with guardrails. Typical intermediate-stage restrictions include:

These restrictions lift automatically with age or time — usually at 17 or 18, or after 6–12 violation-free months.

Stage 3: The full license

Once you age out of the intermediate restrictions (and in some states, complete a violation-free period), you hold an unrestricted license. Nothing extra to file in most states — the restrictions simply expire.

How the stages differ by state

Every state and Washington, D.C. runs a GDL program, but the details vary widely: permit ages run from 14 to 16, required practice hours from zero to 70, and night curfews from sunset to 1 AM. That variation is exactly why a generic log sheet fails — the number you're working toward depends on where you live. Our state-by-state table lists the commonly published hour requirements, and the DrivePath app tracks your progress against your own state's current numbers.

Moving between states? Practice hours generally transfer with proper documentation, but the receiving state's total applies. Keep a detailed, exportable log (date, duration, supervisor, conditions) so your hours are portable — a signed PDF from DrivePath travels better than a half-filled paper sheet.

Making stage one count

  1. Know your two numbers — total hours and night hours for your state. DrivePath loads both when you pick your state.
  2. Log every supervised drive when it happens — the live session timer makes each drive a ten-second logging job.
  3. Practice the conditions the road test assumes — night, rain, highway. DrivePath's condition gaps show what you haven't covered.
  4. Export and certify — finish with a clean PDF log with signature lines, ready for the DMV.

Stage one, handled.

DrivePath tracks your permit hours against your state's exact GDL requirements — free on the App Store.

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