Fewer than one third passing taxi driver entry test - NTA
· RTE.ieLess than a third of taxi-driver entry test sittings were passed last year, despite efforts to attract new drivers into the industry.
Figures from the National Transport Authority (NTA) show that nearly 11,800 tests took place last year but more than 8,100 ended in failure.
The tricky exam requires prospective taxi, hackney and limousine drivers to score at least 75% in two modules covering industry knowledge and area knowledge.
However, the test has consistently proven challenging with success rates of between 31% and 35% over the past three years.
The NTA also said it had detected four cases of cheating by drivers taking the test between 2023 and 2025.
Asked if there had been any cases of impersonation, or any referrals to gardaí over cheating or personation, the authority said it held no records.
Overall figures showed that more than 10,000 test sittings took place in 2023, of which nearly 3,600 were passed and 6,500 failed.
In 2024, there were 10,800 sittings, with around 3,500 passes and just over 7,300 failures.
Across the three-year period, there were more than 32,700 test sittings, with almost 22,000 of them ending in failure.
The pass rate for the full SPSV entry test - excluding retakes - was even lower, falling from 31%in 2023 to around 27% last year.
In 2025, there were 8,941 sittings of the full entry test, with 2,452 passes and 6,489 failures.
The NTA figures also showed significant variation depending on the county being tested for area knowledge.
Last year, the pass rate for full entry-test sittings involving Waterford was just 10%, with only ten passes from 97 sittings.
For Dublin, where most tests were recorded, there were 1,605 passes and 4,318 failures from 5,923 sittings.
A spokesman for the NTA said the test required a 75% grade on two modules and that individual modules could be resat if necessary.
He said a review of the area knowledge module had taken place last year to reflect the widespread use of online mapping apps.
The spokesman explained: "The findings showed that, while passengers still expect drivers to have a higher-than-average understanding of local geography, the use of online maps is widely accepted".
"As a result, the revised Area Knowledge module, which went live [last October], places more emphasis on knowledge of motorways and transport hubs, with greater focus on tourist attractions, hospitals, sports, theatre and music venues and, for urban centres, knowledge on major street names, one-way systems and city routes," he added.
Reporting by Ken Foxe