Driving Calculations & Formulas for Sweden’s Theory Test (Körkort)

Published by KorkortTest4u.se • Updated Oct 2025

Some theory questions are pure knowledge, but many expect you to do quick mental math: How far do you roll before you even touch the brake? What happens to stopping distance if the speed doubles? Which trailer can you legally tow with a B, B96, or BE licence? This guide collects the **handy formulas, rule-of-thumb multipliers, and legal limits** that show up again and again on the Swedish driving theory test. Keep it bookmarked—treat it like a mini handbook you can review the week before your exam.

How to use this page: Each section has a short explanation, a big formula to remember, and a quick example with typical Swedish speeds. You’ll also find links to practice questions you can try immediately on KorkortTest4U.

1) Reaction Distance (Reaktionssträcka)

Reaction distance is how far you travel from the moment you see a hazard until you begin braking. The theory test usually assumes a reaction time of about 1 second for an alert driver, although it can easily rise to 1.5–2 seconds if you are tired, distracted, or driving in the dark.

Quick formula Reaction distance ≈ (Speed ÷ 10) × 3   [meters]

Examples

Why it matters: At 90 km/h your car moves about 25 meters every second. If your attention slips for just one second, you’ve already rolled the length of a tennis court before your foot even touches the brake.

2) Braking Distance (Bromssträcka)

Braking distance is the distance from the instant you press the brake until the car stops. It depends heavily on speed, tyres, brakes, road surface, and weather. For the theory test, you can use a simple rule-of-thumb that’s surprisingly accurate on dry asphalt.

Rule-of-thumb Braking distance ≈ (Speed ÷ 10)² × 0.4   [meters]

Examples (dry road)

Multipliers often used in theory questions: wet road ×2, snow/ice ×4–10. Winter tyres help, but physics still wins—low grip means long braking.

3) Total Stopping Distance (Stoppsträcka)

Stopping distance combines the two parts above. First you roll during the reaction time, then you brake to a standstill. The total is what really matters when you judge gaps, follow distances, and safe speeds.

Always remember Stopping distance = Reaction distance + Braking distance

Example at 90 km/h (dry road)

Speed squared effect: If you double your speed, the braking distance becomes roughly four times longer. That’s why a “small” increase from 90 to 120 km/h makes a huge difference to risk and stopping room.

4) Safe Following Distance (Tvåsekundersregeln)

In normal conditions, keep at least **two seconds** behind the vehicle ahead. In darkness, rain, or heavy traffic, increase to **three or four seconds**. The “seconds” method works at any speed and is easy to judge: pick a roadside marker, count “one-one-thousand, two-one-thousand”—if you pass the marker before you finish counting, you’re too close.

If you need meters Following distance ≈ (Speed ÷ 3.6) × Seconds   [meters]

Examples (2 seconds)

5) Alcohol Limits & Effects (Alkoholhalt)

Sweden has strict rules around alcohol and driving. Even low levels slow reaction times and impair judgement—bad news for stopping distances. For the theory test you should know the legal thresholds:

LimitMeaning
0.2‰ BACLegal limit for drunk driving (can lead to fines & licence suspension)
1.0‰ BACGross drunk driving (serious offence; harsher penalties)
Exam angle: Questions rarely ask you to calculate BAC; they focus on the legal limits, how alcohol affects reaction time, and why “the morning after” can still be risky.

6) Speed, Energy & Risk (Varför hastighet är avgörande)

Kinetic energy grows with the square of speed. That’s why a crash at 100 km/h is far more serious than one at 70 km/h, even if the difference “only” seems like 30 km/h. For stopping, this shows up as the four-times longer braking distance when speed doubles.

Physics in one line Kinetic energy ∝ Speed² → Braking distance ∝ Speed²

7) Vehicle & Trailer Weights (B, B96, BE)

Licence categories affect what you can legally tow. The numbers below are the **typical exam facts** you’ll be asked to recognise. Always check your registration papers for the exact permitted weights for your specific vehicle and trailer.

LicenceYou may drive
B Car up to 3,500 kg total weight. Trailer allowed as long as the combined weight (car + trailer) does not exceed 3,500 kg.
B96 (Utökat B) Car + trailer combined up to 4,250 kg.
BE Trailer up to 3,500 kg total weight (combined may reach 7,000 kg depending on the car).
Watch wording in questions: “Totalvikt” (total weight), “Tjänstevikt” (kerb/empty weight), “Max släpvagnsvikt” (max trailer weight), and “Tågvikt” (combined weight) are specific terms. The exam often hides the answer in the terminology.

8) Tyres, Grip & Seasonal Conditions

Sweden’s weather can stretch stopping distances dramatically. The theory test expects you to know how conditions change braking and following distances—even if the formulas stay the same.

9) Quick Reference Table (Memorise These)

ConceptFormula / RuleExample (90 km/h)
Reaction distance (Speed ÷ 10) × 3 27 m
Braking distance (dry) (Speed ÷ 10)² × 0.4 ≈ 32 m
Total stopping Reaction + Braking ≈ 59 m
Following distance (Speed ÷ 3.6) × 2 s (min.) ≈ 50 m
Alcohol limits 0.2‰ (limit) / 1.0‰ (gross) Know the thresholds
Weights (B / B96 / BE) 3,500 / 4,250 / trailer up to 3,500 kg Check registration papers

10) Practice Right Now

Lock the formulas in with a few quick quizzes:

11) Mini-FAQ

Do I need to memorise exact decimals? No. Use the rules of thumb here. The theory test focuses on understanding and safe choices, not scientific precision.

What if my reaction time is longer than 1 s? Increase reaction distance proportionally. For example, at 90 km/h with 2 s reaction time you travel about 50 m before braking starts.

Can I rely on ABS to shorten braking? ABS helps you steer while braking, but it does not bend physics. On ice, even ABS can’t create grip that isn’t there—drop your speed early.

Summary: The Five Lines to Remember

(1) Reaction ≈ (Speed ÷ 10) × 3
(2) Braking ≈ (Speed ÷ 10)² × 0.4
(3) Stopping = Reaction + Braking
(4) Following ≥ (Speed ÷ 3.6) × 2 s
(5) B / B96 / BE → 3,500 / 4,250 / Trailer up to 3,500 kg

If you can recall those five lines in the exam, you’ll handle almost every calculation they throw at you. Combine them with defensive driving—slow early, watch the conditions, and leave generous space—and you’ll be both a safer driver and a confident theory-test candidate.

Note: This page summarises common rule-of-thumb values used in Swedish theory training. Always follow current Swedish law and your vehicle’s registration data.