Hgv medical age

Author
Discussion

s p a c e m a n

Original Poster:

11,000 posts

155 months

Thursday 19th October 2023
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I'm 45 in December, (How'd that happen, still think I'm late 20s in my head ect) when do I need to do my medical? I was expecting a form or letter or something to drop through my door after speaking to a much older driver but nothing has appeared and on googling it says 'at the age of 45'. Does that mean I have to do it before I'm 45 or once I'm 45, ie before I'm 46?

normalbloke

7,712 posts

226 months

Thursday 19th October 2023
quotequote all
What is the expiry date for your HGV section on your licence?

s p a c e m a n

Original Poster:

11,000 posts

155 months

Thursday 19th October 2023
quotequote all
A month before my birthday in 2026, when I'm 47 about to be 48.


normalbloke

7,712 posts

226 months

Thursday 19th October 2023
quotequote all
Your HGV licence is valid until that date. When you apply for your new licence, that’s when you’ll have to do the medical.

s p a c e m a n

Original Poster:

11,000 posts

155 months

Friday 20th October 2023
quotequote all
Cool, thanks mate. They should probably make that a bit clearer in the need a medical at 45 blurb thumbup

ferret50

1,583 posts

16 months

Friday 20th October 2023
quotequote all
First vocational licence renewal AFTER age 45.

s p a c e m a n

Original Poster:

11,000 posts

155 months

Friday 20th October 2023
quotequote all
Yeah that makes sense now after reading the .gov website. I guess all of the 'medical' websites are trying to drum up business by not making it clear. This is what the majority of my googling was bringing up..

DVLA require existing lorry drivers to have a medical at the age of 45 and then every five years until the age of 65. After 65, the medical has to be done every year. DVLA will usually send out a reminder letter, together with the D4 Medical Form, a few weeks before your medical is due.

Smint

1,984 posts

42 months

Friday 20th October 2023
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Unless your employer pays for the full medical the cost at your own doctor can be shocking, well over £100, some employers will contribute up to a limit, not many will stump up £150 for your own doctor (who won't see you for anything else) to trouser.

Ask around the older drivers at work where they get their medicals done, i use another doctor (not part of a chain) for my now annual HGV medicals, not only is the cost half that (reimbursed anyway) the doctor who does these all the time also gets the paperwork right every time.

ferret50

1,583 posts

16 months

Monday 6th November 2023
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Of course, at the other end of this system, after age 65 a medical is required every year, so the current proposal to raise retirement to age 70 or even higher will have a huge impact on road safety....I had had enough at age 64 when CPC became mandatory.

I can tell from my own health issues that forcing heavy vehicle drivers to work until those kind of ages is not A Good Idea!