Mentor guide

Be the calm part of someone’s test day.

Mentoring is community safety. Your job isn’t to “teach” or “coach the test” — it’s to provide a road-test-ready bike and a predictable, safety-first experience.

Become a mentor → Go to the app →
Educational guidance only. Registry procedures vary — always follow the examiner’s direction.

Core expectations

Why mentors matter

Test days are stressful. A good mentor reduces panic, improves preparation, and keeps decisions safe and calm — especially with weather, paperwork, or last-minute surprises.

Meet-up timing + registry flow (keep it calm)

Meet 10–20 minutes early

Early meet-ups prevent rushed choices and reduce anxiety. The goal is predictability, not “training.”

“Get acquainted” — not a practice session

If the test-taker asks, it’s reasonable to give them a couple minutes to get comfortable:

This is not lessons, drills, or “practice riding.” Road tests are booked under the assumption the rider has already practiced.

Keys + registration/insurance — options if you’re not comfortable

Some mentors prefer to keep documents until the examiner requests them — totally fair. Options:

If an examiner wants the rider to handle documents directly (or wants you to step back), just comply calmly.

What mentors typically handle

What mentors should NOT do