Louisiana Chauffeur License Study Guide 2026

Louisiana chauffeur license study guide: requirements, written test topics, endorsements, and how to prepare for your Louisiana chauffeur's license exam.

Getting your Louisiana chauffeur license requires passing a written knowledge test administered by the Louisiana Office of Motor Vehicles (OMV). This study guide breaks down exactly what you need to know, how to prepare, and what the process looks like from start to finish. Whether you're pursuing the license for a livery service, school transportation, or other commercial passenger work, this guide covers the content the Louisiana test actually tests.

Louisiana defines a chauffeur as any person who operates a vehicle for hire or compensation to transport passengers. The state issues a Class D Chauffeur's License for operators of vehicles designed to transport 14 or fewer passengers (including the driver). For larger vehicles, a commercial driver's license (CDL) with passenger endorsement is required. This guide focuses on the Class D chauffeur license process.

Louisiana Chauffeur License Requirements

To qualify for a Louisiana Class D chauffeur's license, you must meet these requirements:

  • Age: Must be at least 18 years old
  • Valid Louisiana ID: You must have a valid Louisiana Class E (regular) driver's license or have passed your Class E driving test
  • Clean driving record: The OMV and your employer will review your driving history; DWIs, reckless driving, and serious traffic violations can disqualify you
  • Medical fitness: You must be physically capable of safely operating a passenger vehicle
  • Pass the knowledge test: Specific to chauffeur operations in Louisiana

Many municipalities and parishes in Louisiana also require chauffeurs to obtain a local operating permit or business license in addition to the state license, especially for taxis and transportation network company (TNC) drivers. Check with your local government for applicable requirements.

What the Louisiana Chauffeur Knowledge Test Covers

The Louisiana chauffeur knowledge test covers several key areas. Study each category thoroughly—the test doesn't focus exclusively on any single topic, and practical application questions (scenarios, not just definitions) appear regularly.

Traffic Laws and Regulations

Louisiana traffic law applies to all drivers, but chauffeurs need to know it at a deeper level than the average motorist. This includes right-of-way rules, speed limits in special zones (school zones, construction zones), rules for passing, following distance requirements, and regulations specific to vehicles carrying passengers. Know the state's DWI laws: Louisiana's legal limit is 0.08% BAC for most drivers, but chauffeurs operating commercially should be aware that their employer may enforce stricter policies.

Defensive Driving Principles

The test covers defensive driving concepts specifically in the context of transporting passengers. You'll see questions about hazard identification, response to emergencies, managing driver fatigue, and situational awareness. These questions describe a scenario and ask you to identify the safest response—they're testing judgment, not just knowledge of rules.

Passenger Safety and Handling

This is a chauffeur-specific content area that regular CDL or Class E tests don't cover to the same depth. Topics include: safely loading and unloading passengers, assisting passengers with disabilities or mobility limitations, seatbelt requirements for passengers, handling difficult passenger situations, and emergency evacuation procedures. The chauffeur passenger handling practice test covers these scenarios in depth.

Vehicle Operation and Maintenance

You need to know pre-trip inspection procedures—checking tires, brakes, lights, mirrors, and fluid levels before taking passengers. The test may also ask about basic vehicle maintenance signals (warning lights, unusual sounds) and when it's unsafe to continue operating a vehicle that's showing mechanical issues. This isn't a detailed mechanical test—it's about recognizing operational limits and taking appropriate action.

Professional Ethics and Conduct

Louisiana chauffeur test questions cover professional standards: maintaining confidentiality about passengers, appropriate communication, handling complaints, appearance and hygiene standards, and cell phone usage while driving. The chauffeur professional ethics practice test gives you practice with the type of conduct-based questions that appear on the exam.

How to Study for the Louisiana Chauffeur Test

The Louisiana OMV publishes a driver's study guide available on their website (expresslane.org) that covers the rules of the road for Louisiana. For the chauffeur-specific content, that guide is a starting point—but it doesn't go deep on the passenger handling and professional conduct topics. Supplement it with:

  • The chauffeur-specific practice questions on this site, organized by topic area
  • Your employer's training materials if you're being hired into a chauffeur role—many companies provide orientation training that covers both the license exam content and their specific operational standards
  • Louisiana Administrative Code Title 55, Part III (if you want the most authoritative source on for-hire vehicle regulations)

Most people who study for 10–15 hours across 5–7 days of focused preparation pass the chauffeur knowledge test on their first attempt. The test is not designed to trick you—it rewards candidates who understand the material at a practical level.

After You Pass: What Comes Next

Once you've passed the knowledge test, the Louisiana OMV issues your Class D chauffeur's license. You'll receive a temporary paper license immediately; the permanent card arrives by mail within a few weeks. Keep the paper temporary license with you while you wait—it's valid during the interim period.

If you're working for an employer, they'll likely require proof of your license before you start transporting passengers. Some employers, particularly in the medical transport sector, also require you to maintain a clean driving record during employment and undergo periodic motor vehicle record (MVR) checks.

Continuing your professional development beyond the license itself strengthens your position in the industry. Knowledge of safe passenger assistance techniques, defensive driving certifications (like ADED's Driver Rehabilitation Specialist certification for medical transport contexts), and customer service skills all contribute to a sustainable career as a professional chauffeur.

For ongoing practice and skill reinforcement, the chauffeur vehicle operation and maintenance practice questions are a good resource to revisit periodically—they cover the pre-trip inspection and safety monitoring concepts that every professional driver should keep sharp.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.