How Many Hours of Drivers Ed Are Required in Texas?
Texas drivers ed requires 24 hours of classroom instruction for all teen drivers (reduced from 32 hours as of December 2024). This applies whether your teen takes a traditional driving school, an online course, or parent-taught driver education.
But how long drivers ed takes in Texas depends on which instruction method you choose. Texas allows two modes: concurrent and block. Both lead to the same provisional license. The only difference is when your teen gets their learner permit — and therefore when they can start practicing behind the wheel.
- Concurrent (~80% of families): Complete the first 6 hours of classroom instruction, pass the written test, get the permit, then finish the remaining 18 hours while also practicing driving.
- Block (~20% of families): Complete all 24 hours first (minimum 4 days at 6 hours/day), then get the permit and focus entirely on driving.
Concurrent Method (Get Your Permit After 6 Hours)
Most families choose concurrent because it gets the permit faster. Your teen completes the first 6 hours of instruction, passes the written test, and receives their DE-964E certificate. Take that certificate to DPS, pass the vision test, and walk out with a learner permit — potentially the same day they started the course.
From there, they continue the remaining 18 hours of coursework while also logging behind-the-wheel practice hours. This dual-track approach means more total time with a permit before the provisional license visit, which translates to more real driving experience.
Why families choose concurrent
- Fastest path to a learner permit (can be same-day with 6 hours of focused study)
- More calendar time to accumulate the required 44 driving hours
- Teen applies classroom knowledge immediately through driving practice
The tradeoff
Your teen will be juggling coursework and driving practice at the same time. Some families find this harder to manage, and the teen starts driving with only 6 hours of classroom knowledge rather than the full 24.
Block Method (Complete All 24 Hours First)
With block instruction, your teen completes all 24 hours of coursework before visiting DPS. At a pace of 6 hours per day (the daily limit), this takes a minimum of 4 days. Then they get their permit and shift their full attention to driving practice.
Why families choose block
- Full classroom knowledge before getting behind the wheel
- Simpler to manage — one phase at a time
- Works well for teens who prefer to finish one thing before starting another
- Good for anxious drivers who want maximum preparation before driving
The tradeoff
The permit comes later, which means less total calendar time for driving practice. If your teen's 16th birthday is approaching and you want maximum driving time before the provisional license, concurrent is the better bet.
Concurrent vs Block: Side-by-Side Comparison
| Concurrent | Block | |
|---|---|---|
| Classroom hours before permit | 6 hours | 24 hours |
| Fastest time to permit | 1 day | 4 days |
| Coursework during driving? | Yes | No |
| Daily limit | 6 hrs total (up to 2 hrs driving) | 6 hrs classroom |
| Total classroom hours | 24 hours | 24 hours |
| Popularity | ~80% of families | ~20% of families |
| Final license | Identical | Identical |
How Long Does Drivers Ed Take in Texas (Total)?
Beyond the 24 hours of classroom instruction, Texas teen drivers must also complete:
- 44 hours of behind-the-wheel driving — 7 hours instruction, 7 hours observation, and 30 hours practice (at least 10 at night)
- 6-month holding period — your teen must hold the learner permit for at least 6 months before applying for the provisional license
- ITTD course — a separate impact Texas teen drivers course required before the provisional license
In practice, most families complete the entire process in 6 to 9 months. The classroom portion (24 hours) is typically the fastest part. The 6-month permit holding period is the real bottleneck, which is why most families choose concurrent — starting the clock on the holding period as soon as possible.
Can You Switch Between Concurrent and Block?
Yes — until you get your permit. If you start the course planning to do concurrent but decide you'd rather finish all the coursework first, just keep going without visiting DPS. You're on the block path by default until you visit DPS.
However, once you visit DPS and get the learner permit, you're on the concurrent path. There's no switching back at that point because you already have the permit.