no
You can drive an agricultural tractor unaccompanied to and from tractor driving lessons at the age of 16.
No, but there is a level of training involved.
16 for farm tractor, 17 for car, 21 for truck or lorry.
No. There is a tractor license? Not in Australia. The answer is still no. Having a tractor license would not let you even drive a forklift.
In most places, working on one's farm does not require a license. Movement of the vehicle on public roads could be an issue.
A bobtail can be driven with a Class B CDL, but if you're driving tractor-trailers for a living, you'd have a Class A CDL, anyhow.
well yes they can because my uncle has a tractor in dominican republic and he can operate everything and he go with his tractor in th highway with license
You need no license to drive a farm tractor as long as you do not drive it on public roads.
Yes you can operate but its only temporary you must get the licence to continues driving.
That would all depend on what you are driving, the gross vehicle weight, whether or not you are driving for hire, etc. It is actually considered driving without a license if you are driving out of class. If a person with a standard class d driver's license(passenger cars and small trucks) is caught driving a Tractor Trailer that weighs 80,000 lbs, then you can forget about your licenses for a while.
The best way is to attend a truck driving school. If you can't afford it, you may be eligible for a grant through WIA, or you can go to several companies which have their own truck driving school in-house.
You can legally drive an agricultural tractor unaccompanied at the age of 16 years old, only to and from a tractor driving test. At the age of 17 years, if the tractor has two seats then a qualified driver must accompany you, if the tractor only has one seat then you can drive unsupervised. In both cases L plates must be displayed. If driving on a provisional, the tractor width must be 2.45m or less and if pulling a trailer, the trailer must be single axle and width must be 2.45m or less.