French authorities are considering reforms to the driving license exam to address a persistently low pass rate, which has remained below 60% for a decade. The primary focus is on the concept of "eliminatory errors," which are responsible for 93% of failures. A working group is exploring three potential changes: reducing the number of offenses deemed automatically disqualifying, making an error eliminatory only if the examiner deems it an immediate safety risk, or allowing candidates to pass despite a single eliminatory error if they demonstrate sufficient competence and agree to a five-hour post-exam training course. While no decisions have been finalized, these changes could potentially be implemented by late 2026, aiming to simplify the process of obtaining a driving license.