The Tralee pass rate in context
In 2023, 47.1% of candidates passed their driving test at the Tralee centre. That's a below-average difficulty centre, ranking 50th out of 60 centres nationally.
To put that in perspective: the national average pass rate for Category B (car) tests is 52.3%. Tralee underperforms this benchmark by 5.2 percentage points. Candidates here face a tougher challenge than the average Irish learner.
Tralee pass rate (47.1%) shown against the national average of 52.3% (marked with a black line).
Historical trend at Tralee
Pass rates at individual RSA centres can fluctuate year-over-year based on factors like examiner allocation, tester shortages, route changes, and candidate preparation levels. Looking at historical data helps identify whether a centre is consistently difficult or easier, or if the current figure is an outlier.
Tralee's 2023 figure of 47.1% reflects steady performance consistent with other Munster centres. Annual comparisons should be made carefully — the period from 2020-2022 was affected by pandemic-related disruptions to testing, which temporarily altered pass rate patterns across all centres.
Tralee compared to other centres in Kerry
There is 1 other RSA test centre in Kerry. Here's how Tralee stacks up:
| Centre | Pass Rate 2023 | vs Tralee |
|---|---|---|
| Killarney | 52.9% | +5.8 pp |
| Tralee | 47.1% | – |
What this means for your preparation
Given the 47.1% pass rate, extra attention to local routes and a few pre-test lessons can meaningfully improve your odds. The fundamentals still apply regardless of centre difficulty:
- Local familiarity. The examiner can take you anywhere within approximately 5 km of the centre. Practice extensively in the roads and estates within that radius.
- Pre-test lesson. A 60-90 minute lesson with a Tralee-area instructor immediately before your test is arguably the single highest-ROI preparation step for any centre.
- Manoeuvres. Reversing around a corner, three-point turns, and hill starts should be automatic before test day.
- Observations. The biggest cause of failure across all centres is insufficient mirror checks and blind spot observations.
- Documentation. From March 2026, a physical motor insurance certificate is mandatory. Read the full rule
For centre-specific guidance, see our tips for passing at Tralee and the common test routes in the area.