Safety tips for your teen driver
Even after teens receive their license, they're still in the process of learning how to drive. We can help with some valuable safety tips.
Teaching safe driving starts long before your child gets a license and continues well after. Follow these tips to help teen drivers be safe drivers.
Video Transcript: Tips for promoting teen driver safety
- Video duration: 1 minute 40 seconds
- Transcript date: Jan. 21, 2023
Develop Driving Habits [Elapsed Time 00:00]
Helping a teen driver develop excellent driving habits can start by example. There are five ways you, as a parent, can help your teen be a safe driver.
Start Early [Elapsed Time 00:14]
Start early. Explaining safe driving shouldn't start when you hand over the keys. It should be discussed early to help children understand the responsibility and the benefits that come with driving.
Safety Role Model [Elapsed Time 00:25]
Be a safety role model. Practice what you preach by refraining from talking on the phone, reading or typing texts, or changing GPS settings when driving.
Encourage Practice [Elapsed Time 00:34]
Encourage practice. Practice with your teen on the basics of driving. Teach your teen to navigate tough scenarios like one-way streets, road construction and night-time driving.
Coach and Educate [Elapsed Time 00:44]
Coach and educate. Ease your teen into driving by offering more hours behind the wheel with a parent or coach, beyond what the state requires for licensing. This improves your teen's driving skills and confidence. After they're licensed, be sure to ride with them often and continue instruction. You could also try a safe driver contract, where your teen agrees to practice a number of good driving habits. Among those are to never use the phone while driving, and to check in with you when they reach their destination.
Responsible Passenger [Elapsed Time 01:12]
And last but not least, be a responsible passenger. Teach your teen to be a cautious and courteous passenger as well. That means not being a distraction to the driver and not riding with friends who text, talk on the phone or otherwise choose unsafe driving habits.
Begin Teaching Today [Elapsed Time 01:28]
Following these steps can help ensure your teenager will be safer on the roads when it comes time for them to get behind the wheel. Begin teaching your child about safe driving habits today.
End [Elapsed Time 01:40]
Start young.
Long before they get their permits, spend time with children in the car to begin educating them on do's and don'ts.
Reinforce learning.
If your teen is taking a driving course, show interest in the program. As they progress, ask what they're covering. Your conversations will help the lessons take hold.
Keep taking turns behind the wheel.
Continue coaching after the license. It's important that parents continue to actively coach young drivers during the first few years of driving. Regularly ride with your teen to observe and provide pointers.
Lead by example.
It may not always look like it, but when you're driving, your child is observing you too. Promote good driving by doing things the right way.
Put them in a safe car.
It's natural for kids to yearn for a muscle car or a pickup that sits high. It may not make you popular, but safety should come before bragging rights. A safer car can also cut your insurance premiums. Whether it's new or used, pay close attention to safety features and ratings.
Promote distraction-free driving.
There are three types of driving distractions:
- Those that take your eyes off the road
- Those that take your hands off the wheel
- Those that take your mind off your driving
Texting is a potentially deadly combination of all three. Encourage your child to use an app that mutes incoming texts, calls and notifications while the vehicle is moving.
Give them skin in the game.
Consider telling teens on your auto policy that, in the event of an at-fault accident, they'll be responsible for covering the deductible or any resulting premium increase. Also consider creating a teen driver contract to make sure they know their responsibilities and any consequences. Drive home the seriousness of safe driving.
Teach good passenger habits.
Being a smart rider means avoiding distractions and blocking the driver's view. It also means not tolerating dangerous habits of their teen friends behind the wheel.
How USAA can help you and your teen driver
USAA is with you and your new driver — from their learner's permit to their independence. We can help you give your young driver the tools and confidence they need to succeed.
Get ready for the road.
Feel better knowing we have you and your teen covered when they're driving on their own. We'll always be just a click or call away with USAA Roadside Assistance.See note1
Your auto premium may not go up after your teen's first at-fault accident if you get accident forgiveness protection.See note2 Learn more about auto insurance for teen drivers.
Get out on their own.
When it's time to let go, we can easily transition your teen off your policy and on to their own. Children of USAA Auto Insurance policyholders may qualify for a 10% legacy discount.See note3
Car insurance discounts for teen drivers
You may be able to reduce the cost of adding a teen driver to your policy.
- Driver training discountSee note4: Save when eligible drivers complete a basic driver training course.
- Safe driving discountSee note5: Save on premiums by maintaining a good driving record for more than five years.
- Good student discountSee note4: Save when your teen driver brings home good grades.
- Multi-vehicle discountSee note4: You may be able to lower your premium if you add another vehicle to your policy.
- USAA SafePilotSee note® discountSee note6: If you live in an eligible state, you could save with our safe driving program.