Thousands of driving tests were cancelled in Swindon last year because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Tests resumed yesterday but the AA said this disruption may have impacted learner drivers' confidence and compounded a difficult time for many young people.

Figures from the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency show 2,207 driving tests were cancelled at Swindon Test Centre because of the pandemic between March and December.

A further 37 tests were cancelled for other reasons – including 19 for medical absences and 18 because the examiner took annual or special leave.

Across Great Britain, 458,000 tests could not take place because of the pandemic in 2020, though the DVSA said there are currently almost as many - 420,000 - booked for when testing centres reopen.

Interim managing director of AA Driving School Robert Cowell said: "Many pupils will have either had a big break in lessons, which may impact their confidence, or have had to postpone driving lessons for many, many months.

"For young people, who have already suffered disruption to their education, not being able to learn to drive will compound an already stilted start to adult life."

He added that extending the validity period of theory test certificates - as has been the case for MOTs and driving licences – or offering a free re-sit, could help reduce demand, or at least lessen the financial impact.

RAC Foundation's head of roads policy Nicholas Lyes said: “Learner drivers will breathe a sigh of relief that driving lessons and tests are restarting, however the backlog for those waiting for both practical and theory tests is likely to be huge."

He urged the DVSA to consider a short extension for those whose theory test has either expired, or is about to, but the government has already said it will not do so.

A DVSA spokesman added: “Ensuring new drivers have current, relevant knowledge and skills to identify developing hazards is a vital part of the training for young and new drivers, who are disproportionality represented in casualty statistics."

While thousands of tests were cancelled in Swindon, 2,751 did take place between April and the end of December. Of these, 1,464 were successful, giving drivers at Swindon Test Centre a pass rate of 53 per cent – above the average across Britain of 50 per cent.

Meanwhile, DVLA figures from March show just 2.97 million people in Britain aged 16-to-25 hold a full licence – the smallest number since records began in November 2012.