Driving after a concussion should wait until symptoms are gone and a clinician clears you, since attention and reaction time can dip.
A concussion can sound “minor,” yet it can mess with the exact skills driving needs: steady vision, quick decisions, and calm timing. If you’re asking this question, pause and treat it like a safety check, not a productivity test.
There isn’t one timer that fits everyone. Some people feel normal in a day or two. Others need longer. The safe standard stays the same: if your brain still feels off, the road is a rough place to find out.
What “Allowed” Means In Real Life
In many places, “allowed” isn’t a single law you can quote. It’s a mix of safety fitness and local reporting rules for serious head injury.
The U.S. CDC notes that clinicians should be cautious about return to driving, especially if a person has problems with attention, processing speed, or reaction time. Managing Return to Activities (CDC HEADS UP) spells out that caution.
U.K. guidance is blunt. The NHS says not to drive until you feel you have fully back to normal after a head injury or concussion. NHS “Head injury and concussion” advice includes that instruction.
Also in the U.K., government guidance says you must tell DVLA if you have a serious head injury, and it notes penalties for not reporting a medical condition that affects driving. GOV.UK “Head injury and driving” sets out that duty.
Why Driving Can Feel Harder After A Concussion
Driving is a stack of tiny tasks: scanning mirrors, tracking speed, reading signs, judging distance, and reacting to surprises. Your brain usually runs that quietly in the background.
After a concussion, those “background” jobs can turn loud. You may feel slower or easily overloaded. Bright headlights may sting. Busy intersections may feel chaotic. Those are red flags, not personal weakness.
Symptoms that can interfere with driving
- Headache or head pressure
- Dizziness, balance wobble, or light-headedness
- Blurred vision, double vision, or light sensitivity
- Brain fog, slower thinking, or trouble multitasking
- Delayed reaction time, especially when surprised
- Fatigue that hits fast
- Nausea or carsickness
- Irritability that spikes in traffic
You can have only one item on that list and still be unsafe to drive. A split second matters when someone brakes hard in front of you.
Are You Allowed To Drive With A Concussion? What The Rules Mean
Right after the injury, treat driving as off-limits. If you had a hit to the head, felt dazed, blacked out, vomited, had a seizure, or can’t recall what happened, get medical care and don’t drive yourself there.
Even when symptoms seem small, the first day can be tricky. Symptoms can grow later as the day goes on. That’s why many clinicians recommend avoiding driving early on, then returning only when symptoms settle down.
Red Flags That Mean “No Driving Today”
If any of the items below are true, skip driving. Get a lift, use public transit, or stay put.
- You feel dizzy or unsteady when you stand or walk
- You have blurred vision, double vision, or light sensitivity
- You’re nauseated, or motion triggers symptoms
- Your headache is active or spikes with quick movement
- You feel foggy, slow, or you’re forgetting simple steps
- Noise, screens, or busy rooms trigger symptoms fast
- You took medicine that makes you sleepy or dull
- You slept poorly and feel wiped out
If that sounds like you, the answer for today is simple: don’t drive.
How To Return To Driving Without Guessing
A safer return is step-by-step. You don’t go from resting at home to a rush-hour freeway. You build up in small bites, then you stop the moment symptoms pop up.
Start with normal daily tasks
First, you should be able to do a normal day at home without symptoms showing up: walking around, making food, showering, reading a little, and having a calm conversation. If basic tasks stir dizziness or fog, driving is still a no.
Test the motion and visual load
Next, take a short passenger ride in calm conditions. If you get headache, nausea, or that washed-out feeling, your brain is still sensitive to motion and visual flow.
Try a short, easy practice drive
Once you’re symptom-free at rest and during daily tasks, start small: a quiet neighborhood loop in daylight. Keep it short. Go with someone who can take over. If symptoms show up, stop and rest.
Build time and complexity
Then add time. After that, add mild traffic. Night driving and highways can wait. Each step should feel normal, not like you’re pushing through.
Table: Symptoms And What They Mean For Driving
The table below isn’t a diagnosis tool. It’s a practical “what would this do to me in traffic?” filter.
| Symptom or situation | What can go wrong on the road | Safer next move |
|---|---|---|
| Dizziness or balance wobble | Misjudging turns, drifting, late braking | No driving; rest and retry later |
| Blurred vision or double vision | Missing signs, trouble with depth and lane position | No driving; medical review if it persists |
| Light sensitivity | Headlights or sun glare trigger pain and distraction | Skip night driving; avoid bright glare |
| Brain fog or slower thinking | Late decisions at merges and intersections | Delay driving until thinking is steady |
| Headache that rises with motion | Pain steals attention from hazards | Pause driving; rest and treat symptoms |
| Fatigue that hits fast | Microsleeps, poor scanning, short temper | Avoid long trips; take breaks |
| Nausea or carsickness | Sudden need to stop, loss of focus | Be a passenger first; wait for stability |
| Sleepy or dull from medication or alcohol | Slowed reactions and poor judgment | Do not drive while affected |
| Symptoms return during a short test drive | Risk rises as brain load rises | Stop; drop back a step for 24–48 hours |
What To Do If You Have To Get Somewhere
Life doesn’t pause for a concussion. If you must travel, use options that keep you off the wheel.
- Ask a friend or family member for a lift
- Use a taxi or rideshare and sit in the back if motion bothers you
- Take public transit during quieter hours
- If you’re in a rural area, ask your clinic about transport options
If you feel pressured to drive, name the reason out loud: “My reaction time might be off.” That line can cut through the guilt.
Extra Care For Teens, Older Adults, And Work Drivers
Driving risk isn’t the same for everyone.
Teens
New drivers already run close to the edge, since habits are still forming. After a concussion, keep them off the road until symptom-free and cleared by a clinician. Start their first drives in daylight, on quiet streets, with a calm adult in the passenger seat.
Older adults
Older adults can have higher risk of complications after head injury. If balance, vision, or memory slips, a clinician may recommend a formal driving evaluation before returning to independent driving.
Work drivers
If you drive for a living, treat this like workplace safety. Your employer may have return-to-duty rules. A clinician’s note can also reduce pressure to rush back.
When To Get Urgent Medical Care
Some symptoms mean you need urgent evaluation right away. Don’t drive yourself if any of these show up.
- Worsening headache
- Repeated vomiting
- Seizure
- Weakness, numbness, or trouble walking
- Slurred speech
- Increasing confusion, agitation, or unusual behavior
- One pupil larger than the other
- Severe drowsiness that’s hard to wake from
If you’re with someone who has these signs, call your local emergency number.
Table: A Practical Return-To-Driving Checklist
This checklist is for everyday concussion healing. It won’t fit complicated injuries, repeated concussions, or people with ongoing neurological issues.
| Checkpoint | Pass standard | If not yet |
|---|---|---|
| Symptoms at rest | No headache, dizziness, nausea, or fog for a full day | Rest and keep driving off the table |
| Daily tasks | You can do a normal morning and afternoon without symptoms | Shorter activity blocks, more breaks |
| Passenger ride | 10–15 minutes as a passenger causes no symptoms | Wait; retry on a calmer day |
| Short test drive | 5–10 minutes in a quiet area feels normal | Stop driving; return later |
| Moderate drive | 15–20 minutes with mild traffic stays symptom-free | Drop back a step |
| Night or glare | Headlights and sun glare don’t trigger symptoms | Stick to daylight only |
| Longer trip | 30–45 minutes stays steady, no fatigue surge | Avoid long trips for now |
Final Takeaway
If you have a concussion, driving is only on the table when symptoms are gone, you feel clear during normal tasks, and a clinician agrees you’re ready. If there’s any doubt, treat it like a “not today.”
References & Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Managing Return to Activities | HEADS UP.”Notes clinician caution for return to driving when attention, processing speed, or reaction time are affected.
- National Health Service (NHS).“Head injury and concussion.”Advises not driving until you feel you have fully back to normal after head injury or concussion.
- GOV.UK.“Head injury and driving.”Explains DVLA notification rules for serious head injury and notes penalties for not reporting a condition that affects driving.
