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When Can Teens Drive Solo in Connecticut?

In Connecticut, the earliest your teen can drive alone is around age 16.333333333333332. The process starts with a learner’s permit at age 16, followed by 4 months of supervised driving. Once they pass the road test, they’ll get a provisional license with some limits, but they’ll be driving on their own.

Connecticut GDL timeline at a glance

StageAgeWhat changes
Learner’s permit16Can drive with a licensed supervisor (20+)
Hold period4 monthsMust complete supervised hours (40 total)
Provisional license~16.333333333333332Solo driving with restrictions (curfew, passenger limits)
Full licenseUsually 18All restrictions removed

The permit phase in Connecticut

At age 16, your teen applies for a learner’s permit. Connecticut requires them to hold it for at least 4 months.

During the permit phase, a licensed driver age 20 or older must be in the car at all times. No exceptions. Your teen can’t drive to school, work, or a friend’s house alone with a learner’s permit.

Connecticut requires 40 hours of supervised driving during this phase, with 5 of those at night. These hours need to be logged and documented.

Driver education is required in Connecticut. Your teen needs to complete a state-approved course before they can move past the permit stage.

The provisional license (solo driving with limits)

After completing the permit phase, your teen takes the road test. Pass, and they get a provisional license. This is when solo driving actually starts.

Every state’s provisional license includes restrictions on when and with whom new drivers can operate. The typical rules:

  • Night driving restrictions (usually no driving late at night for the first 6 to 12 months)
  • Passenger limits (often no more than one non-family passenger under 18 for the first several months)
  • Zero tolerance for alcohol or drug offenses
  • Restrictions can be extended if violations occur

Most states restrict new solo drivers from driving between 11 PM or midnight and 5 or 6 AM. Connecticut’s specific provisional license curfew hours are set by the state’s GDL law. Check your local DMV or our GDL overview for details.

Getting the full, unrestricted license

The final stage removes all GDL restrictions. In most states, this happens at age 18, though some lift restrictions earlier if a driver stays violation-free for a set period. At that point, your teen can drive anytime, with any number of passengers, without curfew limits.

Making the most of the permit phase

Start a weekly driving routine early in the permit phase. Consistent short sessions beat occasional marathon drives. Your teen builds better habits, and you won’t be scrambling to finish hours before the road test.

The permit period exists for a reason. Crash rates drop significantly for every 10 additional hours of supervised practice. Don’t treat the requirements as a ceiling.

Track permit hours with Moda

Moda tracks your teen’s supervised driving hours automatically. Start time, end time, day vs. night, weather. When the permit phase ends, export the log for the DMV. No paper sheets, no guessing.

See your state’s permit requirements for the full breakdown.


Track your permit hours the easy way.