Driving lessons in Hindi — same standard, same price
For new immigrants and Hindi-first speakers in Abbotsford, learning to drive in your first language removes a major barrier. Concepts like "shoulder check," "right-of-way," and "stale green light" land instantly when explained in Hindi — no mental translation required.
Ardas Driving School offers Hindi instruction at the same rate as English. Same dual-control vehicles. Same ICBC-mapped curriculum. Same instructors who get students through their Class 5 or Class 7 road test.
Why students choose Ardas
- ICBC-certified instructors — every instructor is licensed under the BC Driver Training Industry Office
- Modern dual-control vehicles — same car for lessons and the official ICBC road test
- Trilingual instruction — English, Punjabi (ਪੰਜਾਬੀ), and Hindi (हिन्दी), no surcharge
- 7 days a week — Monday through Sunday, 8 AM to 8 PM
- Pick-up & drop-off* — your instructor confirms a meeting point in Abbotsford at booking
The newcomer advantage
If you're an international licence holder transferring to BC, your previous experience counts — but BC traffic patterns, ICBC examiner expectations, and Canadian road etiquette have specific quirks. We've helped students from India, Pakistan, the UAE, and other Hindi-speaking regions adapt their existing skills to pass the BC road test efficiently.
Our pricing — published, no hidden fees
- Driving Class — $55 (1-hour private lesson)
- Road Test Car Rental — $70 (use of our ICBC-approved dual-control vehicle for the official test, plus a quick controls check before)
- 1-Hour Class + Road Test Car — $120 (60-minute warm-up lesson immediately before the test, plus the test-day car — most popular bundle)
- 10-Class Package — $525 (saves $25 vs paying per class — best value for new drivers)
Lessons in English, Punjabi, and Hindi at no extra charge. Pick-up and drop-off available* across Abbotsford. Call (778) 300-3339 to book.
What to expect on test day
The ICBC road test itself is in English. Our instructors spend the final lessons drilling the specific English phrases the examiner will use ("when safe, change lanes to the left," "execute a parallel park here") so the language switch isn't disorienting. You go in calm, in a car you know, with vocabulary you've practiced.
