Most motoring offences result in a fine and points. Dangerous Driving is different. It is a crime that can result in a prison sentence.

Under Section 2 of the Road Traffic Act 1988, you are guilty of dangerous driving if your driving falls "far below" the standard of a competent and careful driver, and it would be "obvious" to a competent driver that driving in that way would be dangerous.

The consequences are devastating:

· Mandatory Disqualification: Minimum 12 months (often much longer).

· Extended Re-Test: You must pass a grueling, extended driving test to get your licence back.

· Prison: Up to 2 years in custody (or 14 years if you cause death).

· Criminal Record: A permanent mark that can bar you from employment and international travel.

At Motoring Defence, we are specialist dangerous driving solicitors. We understand that the line between "Careless Driving" (a non-imprisonable offence) and "Dangerous Driving" is often thin and subjective. A moment of distraction, a mechanical fault, or a medical episode can be misconstrued by the police as a deliberate act of recklessness. In this guide, we explain how we fight to keep you out of prison and, where possible, on the road.

The Strategy: Downgrading to "Careless Driving"

The most effective defence strategy is often not to argue "I didn't do it," but to argue "It wasn't dangerous."

· Section 2 vs. Section 3: Dangerous Driving (Sec 2) requires the standard to be "far below." Careless Driving (Sec 3) only requires it to be "below."

· The Difference: Careless driving carries 3-9 points and a fine. No mandatory ban. No prison. No criminal record in the same sense.

· The Negotiation: We analyse the evidence—dashcam footage, witness statements, and road conditions. We draft detailed "Representations" to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS). We argue that while your driving may have been a mistake (careless), it did not meet the high threshold of dangerous. We frequently succeed in getting the CPS to accept a plea to the lesser charge, saving our clients from a criminal conviction and a ban.

The "Mechanical Defect" Defence

Did your car fail you?

· Sudden Failure: If your brakes seized, your tyre blew out, or your steering locked, you are not guilty of dangerous driving—provided you couldn't have known about the defect beforehand.

· The Expert Report: The police will do a basic vehicle check. We go further. We instruct independent forensic vehicle examiners to inspect your car. If they find a catastrophic mechanical failure that explains the loss of control, the prosecution case often collapses.

"Automatism": The Medical Defence

You cannot be guilty if you were not in conscious control of your actions.

· The Blackout: If you suffered a sudden, unpredictable medical episode—a sneeze fit, a stroke, a hypoglycaemic attack, or a faint—you may have a complete defence known as "Automatism."

· The Evidence: This is a high bar. We need detailed medical records and expert reports from neurologists or cardiologists to prove that the loss of control was total and involuntary. If successful, you are acquitted entirely.

The Extended Re-Test Trap

Even if you avoid prison, a conviction for dangerous driving triggers the Mandatory Extended Re-Test.

· The Cost: This is not a normal driving test. It is twice as long and twice as hard. Failure rates are high.

· The Delay: You cannot drive at all until you pass it. With current DVSA backlogs, you could be off the road for months after your ban has officially ended. This is why fighting the Dangerous Driving charge to get it downgraded to Careless Driving is so critical—it avoids the extended re-test entirely.

Police Reconstruction: Challenging the Science

In serious cases involving crashes, the police will use "Crash Reconstruction Experts." They use skid marks and crush damage to estimate your speed.

· The Flaw: These estimates are often based on assumptions about road friction and braking reaction times.

· Our Experts: We employ our own accident reconstructionists. We re-calculate the data. We often find that the police exaggerated your speed or failed to account for environmental factors (like black ice or oil spills). By casting doubt on the "scientific" proof of danger, we undermine the prosecution's narrative.

Why Motoring Defence?

· Crown Court Experience: Dangerous driving cases often go to the Crown Court. We have access to top-tier barristers who specialise in winning juries over.

· Technical Knowledge: We understand the physics of a crash. We don't just read the police report; we dismantle it.

· Plea Bargaining: We have a strong track record of negotiating with the CPS to drop the most serious charges before the trial even begins.

Conclusion

A dangerous driving charge puts your liberty at risk. Do not leave your defence to a generalist. You need a team that understands the difference between a "momentary lapse" and "dangerous recklessness."

Contact Motoring Defence today. Let us fight to save your licence and your freedom.