New Delhi, April 21, 2026: Primus Partners has released its latest thought leadership report, Rethinking Driver Training: A Road to Safer Traffic, calling for urgent reforms in India’s driver training and licensing ecosystem to address the country’s persistent road safety crisis.

The report highlights that despite stronger laws, enforcement measures, and infrastructure improvements, road accidents and fatalities continue to rise, pointing to deeper behavioural and systemic gaps. It identifies driver preparedness as a critical missing link, noting that a large proportion of drivers enter the system without formal training and receive little to no skill reinforcement after obtaining a licence.

It further underscores that India’s current licensing framework remains largely procedural, with limited focus on assessing real-world driving competence such as hazard perception, defensive driving, and decision-making under complex traffic conditions. This gap, the report argues, weakens the effectiveness of broader road safety interventions.

Commenting on the findings, Aarti Harbhajanka, Co-founder and Managing Director, Primus Partners, said, “Rethinking driver training is not a peripheral reform but a foundational one. Safer roads ultimately depend on drivers’ awareness, judgement and sense of responsibility, which must be built through structured and behaviour-oriented training systems.”

Adding to this, Raghavendra Kumar, popularly known as the Helmet Man of India, said, “Road safety is not just about rules and regulations, it is a mindset that must be cultivated from an early age and reinforced consistently through life. Every day, we see lives lost due to lack of awareness, poor judgement, and inadequate training. If we want to truly change outcomes on our roads, we must focus on building responsible behaviour through structured and continuous driver training. Creating informed, disciplined and aware drivers is the most powerful way to prevent accidents and protect lives.”

Further, Shri S.N Dhole, Head- Technical Secretariat, Central Institute of Road Transport, Pune, said, “Road safety in India has seen significant advancements through stronger vehicle standards and regulatory frameworks over the years. However, safety is not determined by engineering alone. The competence, discipline and preparedness of drivers remain critical to ensuring these standards translate into real-world outcomes. Strengthening driver training through structured learning, objective testing and continuous skill reinforcement is essential to making the licensing system a true measure of capability. This report presents a timely and constructive pathway to align driver training frameworks with India’s broader road safety goals.”

The report positions structured driver training as a high-impact and scalable solution, recommending a shift towards competency-based licensing, mandatory training frameworks, and continuous skill reinforcement. It outlines a phased reform approach, including stronger training standards, technology-enabled testing, and long-term behavioural monitoring mechanisms.

By placing driver capability at the centre of road safety policy, the report calls for a transition from a reactive, enforcement-led model to a more preventive and competency-driven system aimed at reducing accidents and saving lives.