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What Counts as Night Driving in New South Wales?
New South Wales requires 20 hours of night driving before you can get your license. But when does “night” actually start? That depends.
New South Wales’s Night Driving Definition
New South Wales defines night as sunset to sunrise. No fixed clock time. The sun goes down, night starts. The sun comes up, night ends.
This means night hours shift throughout the year. In December, sunset might be around 5 PM. In June, it could be past 8:30 PM. The same 7 PM drive counts as night in winter but not in summer.
If you’re tracking on paper, you need to look up your local sunset time before every drive. Most people don’t. Moda checks it automatically using your phone’s GPS location.
What This Means for Your 20 Night Hours
New South Wales wants 20 hours of driving during the night window defined above. Out of your total 120 required hours, that’s the part most families put off.
Night drives are stressful. Parents don’t love being in the passenger seat when visibility drops. Teens are less confident. So the night hours pile up at the end and you’re scrambling.
Start mixing in night drives from month one. Even 20 minutes after dinner twice a week adds up to almost 3 hours a month.
The Winter Shortcut
Since New South Wales uses sunset-based night hours, winter is your friend. The sun sets around 5 PM in December. A 5:30 PM drive that feels like early evening? That’s a night hour.
In June, you’d have to wait until almost 9 PM for the same drive to count. If you’re trying to finish night hours quickly, do them between November and February.
New South Wales Permit Requirements Quick Reference
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Total supervised hours | 120 |
| Day hours | 100 |
| Night hours | 20 |
| Night definition | Sunset to sunrise |
| Minimum permit age | 16 |
| Permit hold period | 12 months |
| Supervisor minimum age | 21 |
Tracking Night Hours in New South Wales
Since New South Wales’s night definition is tied to sunset, you need to know the exact sunset time for your location every time you drive. That changes daily.
Moda checks sunset and sunrise times for your GPS coordinates every session. It tags day and night automatically. You don’t look anything up, and your log is accurate when you hand it to the DMV.
For full New South Wales permit requirements, see our New South Wales permit hours guide.