Great to hear about your perspectives on this, whether it's gifting or short-term loaning, both helps. Lovely to read responses. I realise that some people may just have too many grandchildren to think about helping everyone in this way.
Back in the day I paid for my own driving lessons at 23 yrs in a big city as my parents really couldn't have afford to help, and my grandparents (bar one) had sadly passed away young - but they would have had too many youngsters to think about as families were much larger.
I was ridiculously nervous and didn't need to drive at all for three years after passing first time (public transport was good ) - but when I got a job elsewhere more rural in late 20s I was thrown in the deep end as had to drive long distances for work related meetings. I was given a company car as part of the package - and the first few weeks and months were full of crazy angst! Then thankfully with practice I gained in confidence and it's the best skill ever, if you enjoy it. I love driving.
I agree with the worries about driving too early and with young passengers on board - as tragically too many youngsters sadly have car accidents particularly when inexperience clashes with bad driving conditions and today's busy roads and potholes. The charity Brake campaigns on this.
We have a young person currently learning in their twenties and we help as much as we possibly can - and she herself works to fund it of course - but she is very nervous about what it's costing (as not a natural driver and we have had family tragedy in recent times, which doesn't help, but she's managing well on the whole ). Anyway lessons are really very expensive. A whole day's work funds one lesson pretty much. Previously she had to stop as the instructor changed to a different job!
Her grandparent could really usefully help and take away some of the financial worries at least, just by helping with a few lessons (not all) - - but once again not interested and of course it's her 100 percent right to decide. It's not as if it's to fund a holiday or something not needed - or to be idle. And yet 'family means everything' but there's lots of one-way traffic.
Heartened by the responses on here.
I had thought people might say: 'certainly not, it's not for me to help with that kind of thing' .
It has to come from the heart anyway, whether to help or with practical considerations in mind - and sometimes the different parents of grandchildren have very different financial capabilities themselves (which one person said in fact...).
Being fair and equal in helping all grandchildren in a similar way could be open to questions possibly - but that's a whole new topic again.