The Queen is reportedly giving up driving on public roads following Prince Philip's car crash two months ago.
Her Majesty is the only person in the UK allowed to drive without a licence, but agreed to stop driving on the advice of her security team, according to The Sunday Times.
Instead she will be chauffeured on public roads.
While protocol dictates the Queen has to be driven to public engagements, despite her age up until now she still gets into the driver's seat to get around her estates and for private events.
The Queen, who turns 93 this month, would have been reluctant to give up the privilege.
Queen Elizabeth's car collection is estimated to be worth upwards of $NZD18 million, with the royal favouring up-market brands like Land Rover, Range Rover, Bentley and Jaguar.
The Queen has never had to take a driving test and is able to drive without a number plate as part of the discretionary powers she enjoys as monarch.
At the age of 18, Elizabeth, then a princess, trained as a driver and mechanic for the Women's Auxiliary Territorial Service during World War 2.
Since then she has reportedly been a confident driver, even famously once scaring King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia with her skills.
In 1998, King Abdullah visited the Queen at her Balmoral estate, with former British ambassador Sherard Cowper-Coles telling The Sunday Times the Saudi monarch had been unnerved by her fast driving.