AVOP Practice Test PDF – Free Airside Vehicle Operators Permit Questions

Download a free AVOP practice test PDF. 60+ Airside Vehicle Operators Permit questions covering Transport Canada rules, runway markings, and radio procedures.

Free AVOP Practice Test PDF – Airside Vehicle Operators Permit (Canada)

The Airside Vehicle Operators Permit (AVOP) is a Transport Canada–regulated credential required to operate any vehicle on the movement area of a Canadian airport. Whether you work in ground handling, aircraft refuelling, baggage services, airfield maintenance, or any other role that takes you onto runways and taxiways, you must hold a valid AVOP for your airport. The permit system exists because the airside environment is one of the most safety-critical workspaces in the world — a single mistake involving an aircraft, vehicle, or FOD incident can be catastrophic. This free PDF compiles practice questions that mirror the content and format of AVOP written tests administered at Canadian airports.

Download the PDF below to study Transport Canada aerodrome standards, runway and taxiway markings, right-of-way rules, radio communication procedures, and FOD awareness. Use the included answer explanations to build genuine understanding — not just memorised answers — so that you can apply the rules correctly in real airside situations after you receive your permit.

Exam Fast Facts

Transport Canada Aerodrome Standards for Vehicle Operations

Transport Canada's Canadian Aviation Regulations (CARs), specifically Part III (Aerodromes), establish the legal framework for all vehicle operations on the movement area of certified aerodromes. AVOP candidates must understand that the movement area consists of the manoeuvring area (runways and taxiways) plus the apron, and that different rules and permit categories apply to different zones within that area. Key regulatory concepts tested on AVOP written exams include hold short lines, runway guard lights, stop bar lights, and the procedures required before crossing an active runway. You must also know how to interpret a Notices to Airmen (NOTAMs) affecting ground movement and how airport operations authorities use runway status lights (RWSLs) to protect active runways from incursions without relying on radio clearance alone.

Runway and Taxiway Markings and Signs

Reading and correctly interpreting airfield markings and signs is one of the most heavily tested areas on every AVOP written exam. Runway markings you must know include the threshold marking (eight white stripes), runway designation numbers (magnetic heading divided by ten, rounded), centreline stripes, touchdown zone markings, and aiming point markings. Taxiway markings are yellow and include centreline (solid yellow line), edge markings (two solid yellow lines), runway hold short markings (two solid and two dashed yellow lines — always stop on the dashed side), and enhanced centreline markings near runway intersections. Signs are either mandatory instruction signs (red background, white text — runway designations, runway hold short, critical area boundaries) or information signs (yellow background, black text — direction, location, destination). A vehicle operator who misreads a runway hold short sign and crosses without clearance creates a potential runway incursion — the most serious safety event on an airfield.

Right-of-Way Rules – Aircraft Always Have Priority

The most fundamental rule in the AVOP framework is that aircraft always have the right of way over all ground vehicles, without exception. On the movement area, a vehicle operator must yield to all aircraft — taxiing, being pushed back, towed, or otherwise under movement — regardless of whether the aircraft is being operated under its own power. Beyond aircraft priority, right-of-way rules on the airside follow a hierarchy: emergency vehicles operating with lights and sirens have priority over all other vehicles except aircraft; follow-me vehicles escorting aircraft have priority over other ground vehicles; and all vehicles must yield to refuelling trucks when they are actively connected to an aircraft. AVOP exam questions frequently present scenario-based situations at intersections or on taxiways where you must identify the correct action — usually stop, wait, and yield — rather than proceed.

Radio Communications, FOD Awareness, and AVOP Categories

Ground frequency radio communication is mandatory for any vehicle operating on the manoeuvring area (Category B and above). AVOP candidates must know correct radio phraseology for requesting and acknowledging clearances, reading back runway crossing instructions verbatim, and reporting emergencies. The phonetic alphabet and standard aviation numbers (niner for 9, tree for 3, fife for 5) are tested because misunderstandings on ground frequency have caused runway incursions. FOD (foreign object debris) awareness questions cover what constitutes FOD (nuts, bolts, rags, ice, wildlife), how to report it, and FOD walk procedures before flight operations. The four AVOP categories (A through D) define where a permit holder may operate: Category A is restricted to the apron and non-movement areas; Category B adds taxiways; Category C adds runways and the full manoeuvring area; and Category D authorises aircraft towing. Written exam questions often ask which category is required for a described job role or location.

Continue Preparing with Online AVOP Practice Tests

This PDF is a strong foundation for your AVOP written test preparation, but interactive online practice tests let you simulate exam conditions with timed sessions and instant answer feedback. Visit our AVOP practice tests page to access full-length online quizzes covering all permit categories and Transport Canada aerodrome standards. Pairing this PDF with regular timed online sessions will give you the confidence and knowledge depth you need to pass your AVOP written exam on the first attempt.

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