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Nevada Solo Driving: When Can Your Teen Get Behind the Wheel?
Solo driving in Nevada starts around age 16 at the earliest. Your teen picks up their learner’s permit at 15 and a half, puts in 6 months of supervised time behind the wheel, then takes the road test. Pass it, and they get a provisional license. Restrictions apply, but they’re driving alone.
Nevada GDL timeline at a glance
| Stage | Age | What changes |
|---|---|---|
| Learner’s permit | 15 and a half | Can drive with a licensed supervisor (21+) |
| Hold period | 6 months | Must complete supervised hours (50 total) |
| Provisional license | ~16 | Solo driving with restrictions (curfew, passenger limits) |
| Full license | Usually 18 | All restrictions removed |
The permit phase in Nevada
Step one: learner’s permit at age 15 and a half. Nevada says they need to hold it for at least 6 months before the road test.
During the permit phase, a licensed driver age 21 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.
Nevada requires 50 hours of supervised driving during this phase, with 10 of those at night. These hours need to be logged and documented.
Driver education is required in Nevada. Your teen needs to complete a state-approved course before they can move past the permit stage.
The provisional license (solo driving with limits)
Once the permit hold period is done and the road test is passed, your teen gets a provisional (sometimes called “intermediate”) license. Solo driving begins, but with guardrails.
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. Nevada’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
Full driving privileges typically come at 18. Some states drop restrictions at 17 if the driver has a clean record. Once your teen reaches this stage, curfew limits, passenger restrictions, and all other provisional rules go away.
Making the most of the permit phase
Parents, don’t just sit there. Talk through decisions out loud. “Why did you slow down there?” and “What would you do if that car pulled out?” builds the kind of defensive thinking that keeps new solo drivers safe.
Research shows teens who practice in varied conditions (rain, night, highways, parking lots, busy intersections) are safer drivers. Don’t just loop the same neighborhood.
Track permit hours with Moda
During the permit phase, Moda logs every practice session and shows your progress toward Nevada’s requirements. Day hours, night hours, total time. When you’re ready for the road test, export a clean driving log.
Check Nevada’s full permit requirements.