AITA for making my girlfriend lose her driving license instead of taking a small 2 hour course?
A boyfriend refused to claim his girlfriend’s 42-in-a-30 speeding ticket, forcing her to lose her new license instead of him taking a 2-hour Zoom course. Together six years, she’s had her UK license 18 months—he’s had his nine years with zero points.
She was already on 3 points; adding another 3 as a new driver meant automatic revocation, retests, and £500 in costs. He could’ve taken the course (no points), but wanted a spotless record. She called it petty; he said her fault. Overcrowding on the roads meets strict UK rules, while her plea to lie tightens the knot.


The couple’s daily life usually runs smoothly with shared driving duties.

UK point rules create high stakes for new drivers.


The camera caught her red-handed in his car.







Refusing to lie on an official DVLA form is legally and ethically non-negotiable, regardless of relationship pressure. The boyfriend faces a clear choice: commit perjury (punishable by up to 12 months in prison) or let his girlfriend face consequences she earned.
Opposing views frame the course as a harmless favor, but the form is sworn—lying risks CCTV, phone pings, or tip-offs exposing the fraud. Simultaneous convenience for her (keeping wheels) ignores public safety; 42 in a 30 is 40% over the limit, not a slip. Beyond that, she’s racked 6 points in 18 months—statistically reckless for a novice.
Motoring law expert Nick Freeman states: “Taking points for another driver is perverting the course of justice; even low-level speeding cases see custodial sentences when fraud is proven.” What makes the story more complicated, she demands he risk jail to save her £500 and bus commutes. Critics call him petty for valuing a clean record, yet integrity isn’t pettiness.
The knot tightens with her entitlement—expecting cover-ups normalizes rule-breaking. This reflects broader societal splits: accountability versus coddling repeat offenders. UK roads already claim 1,700+ lives yearly; enabling speeders adds fuel. He’s right to refuse, but the relationship may not survive her resentment.
Check out how the community responded:
Users overwhelmingly backed the boyfriend for refusing to commit fraud and letting consequences teach responsibility.














Some highlighted legal landmines with real-world precedents.



Others urged reflection on the relationship’s red flags.




A few framed speeding as a dangerous habit, not a victimless slip.









The boyfriend upheld the law and let his girlfriend face the fallout of her second speeding offense in 18 months. Commenters agreed: lying risks prison, and enabling her won’t fix reckless habits. Would you take the course to save a partner £500, or draw the line at perjury? Ever had a speeding ticket spark relationship drama? Share below and vote: NTA or too harsh?

42 in a 30 limit is NOT just 3 points – has to be less than 40 for that. Check it out. Also if there is photographic evidence, it will be obvious that the driver was not you, so both of you will be guilty of perverting justice. NTA