Merging is where two traffic streams going in the same direction become one. There are two types of merge:
- where two lanes merge to one lane
- or when one lane ends and you need to merge into the lane that continues.

Where should you practise this?
- Where the road narrows and two lanes become one. Practise at a time when there’s at least some traffic flowing on the road.
- Where one lane ends and you need to merge into the lane that continues, like a feeder lane on a motorway. Choose a time when the traffic isn’t really heavy – so avoid rush hour.