Getting your teenager behind the wheel in Texas isn't a single event — it's a multi-year process with specific age-based milestones. If you're a parent trying to help your teen through it for the first time, the rules can feel confusing. Here's exactly how it works.
The Three Phases of a Texas Teen License
Texas uses what's called a Graduated Driver Licensing (GDL) system. Your teen moves through three phases, each with different requirements and restrictions.
Phase 1 — Learner License (Age 15+)
Your teen can apply for a learner license as early as their 15th birthday. To qualify they need to:
- Be enrolled in or have completed an approved Texas driver education course
- Pass the written knowledge test at DPS (our classroom component prepares them for this)
- Pass a vision exam
- Have a parent or guardian present
- Provide proof of identity, Texas residency, and school enrollment (VOE form)
With a learner license, your teen can drive only when accompanied by a licensed driver 21 or older who's in the front passenger seat. No solo driving — period.
Phase 2 — Provisional License (Age 16+, after 6 months with permit)
After holding a learner license for at least 6 months and turning 16, your teen can apply for a provisional license. This requires:
- Completion of all driver education coursework (32 hours classroom + 14 hours behind-the-wheel)
- At least 30 hours of documented parent-supervised driving (minimum 10 at night) — this is why we give you the 30-hour log form
- Passing the DPS skills (road) test — we're an authorized test site so you can take it here
- No traffic violations during the permit phase
A provisional license lets your teen drive solo, but with restrictions:
- No driving between midnight and 5 AM (except for work, school, or emergencies)
- No more than one passenger under 21 who isn't a family member
- No using a wireless device, even hands-free
Phase 3 — Unrestricted License (Age 18)
At 18, the provisional restrictions drop off automatically and your teen has a standard Texas Class C license. They don't need to retest or reapply — it just converts.
What Driver's Education Actually Covers
Texas requires teens to complete a specific amount of driver education before getting a provisional license. The exact breakdown:
- 32 hours classroom instruction — traffic laws, safe driving, Texas-specific rules
- 14 hours behind-the-wheel — one-on-one with a certified instructor in a dual-control vehicle
- 30 hours parent-supervised driving — documented on the official log, including 10 night hours
You can complete the classroom portion in-person or online, but the 14 hours of behind-the-wheel must be with a state-certified instructor in an approved vehicle. There's no shortcut here — and for good reason. Those are the hours where real skills get built.
Documents You'll Need
When you take your teen to DPS for their learner license, bring:
- Birth certificate or US passport
- Social Security card
- Proof of Texas residency (two documents like a utility bill or bank statement in the parent's name)
- Verification of Enrollment (VOE) form from their school — less than 30 days old
- Proof of driver education enrollment
- Parent or guardian signature (in person)
The Smart Path for Most Families
If your teen just turned 15, here's what we usually recommend:
- Enroll in Teen Driver's Ed now. They can start the classroom component before even getting a permit.
- Complete classroom hours over 4-8 weeks.
- Take them to DPS for the learner license — the written test is fresh and they pass easily.
- Start behind-the-wheel sessions with us + parent-supervised hours at home simultaneously.
- 6 months later, take the DPS skills test at our facility and walk out with a provisional license.
It's genuinely easier when you start early. Teens who wait until 16 often feel rushed, and the 6-month permit waiting period means they can't get a provisional license until 16½ anyway.
Questions? Call us at (210) 923-7233 — we're happy to walk you through your specific situation.