Learner's Permit Practice Test 2026: Free Study Guide for First-Time Drivers
Free learner's permit practice test 2026. Road signs, traffic laws, right-of-way. Prepare for your DMV written test and get your permit on the first try.

Learner's Permit Practice Test 2026: Your Complete Study Guide
Getting your learner's permit is the first real milestone on the road to independence. You finally get behind the wheel — but not before you pass that DMV written knowledge test. It sounds straightforward, but plenty of first-time test-takers walk in underprepared and walk out disappointed. Don't be one of them.
This guide covers everything you need to know: what a learner's permit actually is, the minimum age in your state, how many questions you'll face, what topics the test covers, and — most importantly — how to study so you pass on your first attempt. Whether you're 15 and counting down the days or 17 and just now getting around to it, the information here will help you show up ready.
Learner's Permit at a Glance

What Is a Learner's Permit?
A learner's permit — sometimes called an instruction permit, provisional permit, or simply a driver's permit — is a restricted license that lets you practice driving legally before you earn full driving privileges. Think of it as stage one of a two-step process. You hold the permit, log supervised hours behind the wheel, and then graduate to a full license after meeting your state's requirements.
The permit comes with rules. You can't just hop in the car and drive wherever you want. In most states you need a licensed adult (usually 21 or older) in the front passenger seat at all times. Some states restrict driving at night or on highways until you've had the permit for a set number of months. These restrictions exist because new drivers — statistically — are at the highest crash risk in their first year behind the wheel.
Here's the thing about a learner's permit that surprises many teens: it's not just a formality. The supervised driving period is where you actually build the muscle memory and judgment that classroom study can't teach. The permit is your training ground. Use it seriously.
The 3 Stages of Graduated Driver Licensing (GDL)
You must have a licensed adult (21+) in the passenger seat at all times. No solo driving. Log required supervised hours and hold the permit for the minimum period before moving to Stage 2.
You can drive solo, but restrictions remain. Most states limit nighttime driving and restrict non-family passengers under 18 for 6–12 months. Requires passing a road skills test.
Unrestricted driving. Typically reached at age 17–18 after holding the intermediate license without violations for the required period. All previous restrictions are lifted.
Minimum Age Requirements by State
The most common minimum age to apply for a learner's permit in the United States is 15 years old — but it varies more than most people realize. Some states let you start as young as 14, while others require you to wait until 16. Here's a quick breakdown of how states fall across the age spectrum:
- Age 14: A handful of rural or agricultural states — including parts of South Dakota, Kansas, and Iowa — allow permits at 14, sometimes with restrictions for farm or hardship driving.
- Age 15: The majority of states fall here. Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming all issue permits at 15.
- Age 15½: California, New Jersey, and a few others split the difference.
- Age 16: Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont make you wait until 16.
Always check your own state's DMV website — these ages occasionally shift, and some states have separate rules for hardship permits versus standard ones. Your state's DMV practice test page will show you the most current local requirements too.
How Many Questions Are on the Permit Test?
The written knowledge test — the thing standing between you and your permit — varies quite a bit depending on where you live. Most states use tests in the 20 to 50 question range, with a passing score typically between 70% and 80%. A few states go higher.
Some states give you a limited number of attempts before making you wait or pay additional fees. Alaska, for instance, allows multiple retakes but charges after the first failed attempt. That's another reason to prepare — you don't want to discover retake fees the hard way.
The questions are multiple choice, pulled from a standardized pool. Most DMVs give you a computer-based test at a testing station inside the DMV office, though some states have moved to online proctored testing. Check your state's DMV website for the exact format you'll encounter.
Permit Test Format by State
- Alaska: 20 questions, 80% to pass (16 correct)
- New York: 20 questions, 70% to pass (14 correct)
- Texas: 30 questions, 70% to pass (21 correct)
- Oregon: 35 questions, 80% to pass (28 correct)
Shorter tests still cover all major topic areas — road signs, traffic laws, right-of-way, and alcohol/DUI rules. Don't assume fewer questions means easier. The passing threshold is often just as demanding.

What Topics Does the Learner's Permit Test Cover?
The knowledge test isn't a trivia quiz — it tests whether you actually understand the rules of the road. Every state's test pulls from a core set of topics, even if the exact questions differ. You need to know all of these cold before you sit down at that DMV terminal.
Road Signs and Their Meanings
This is usually the single largest category on any state's permit test. Signs are grouped by shape and color — regulatory signs are white rectangles, warning signs are yellow diamonds, construction zones use orange, and so on. You'll need to recognize signs you may never have paid attention to as a passenger: yield signs, no-passing zones, divided highway begins, pedestrian crossing, and dozens more.
One common mistake: assuming you already know road signs from riding in cars your whole life. You probably know stop signs and speed limit signs. But do you know what a pennant-shaped sign means? (No passing zone.) What about a circular sign? (Railroad crossing ahead.) Study the sign section carefully — it's where prepared test-takers pick up easy points and unprepared ones lose them.
Traffic Laws and Right-of-Way
Right-of-way rules trip up more test-takers than almost any other topic. Who goes first at a four-way stop? (The first driver to arrive; if simultaneous, the driver on the right.) What happens when a traffic light is broken? (Treat it as a four-way stop.) When must you yield to pedestrians? (At all crosswalks, marked or unmarked.)
Your state's driver handbook spells out every right-of-way scenario. Read those sections carefully — the test will present realistic situations and ask what the correct action is. It's not enough to vaguely know the rules; you need to be precise.
- Four-way stop: First to arrive goes first; if tied, driver on the right has priority
- Broken traffic light: Treat as a four-way stop — all drivers yield in turn
- Pedestrian crosswalks: You must yield at all crosswalks, marked or unmarked
- Roundabout: Yield to traffic already in the circle before entering
- Emergency vehicles: Pull to the right and stop until emergency vehicle passes
Speed Limits and Safe Following Distance
Every state establishes default speed limits for different road types: residential streets, school zones, highways, rural roads. You're expected to know these defaults, not just posted limits. In most states, the default residential speed limit is 25 mph; school zones drop to 15–20 mph when children are present.
Following distance is tested too. The standard safe following distance is 3 seconds in most states — pick a fixed point, and you should pass it 3 seconds after the car ahead does. In adverse weather, that extends to 4–6 seconds. When you're driving a vehicle towing a trailer or riding a motorcycle, some states test the 4-second rule. Know exactly what your handbook says — the test will pick the specific number your state uses.
Alcohol, Drugs, and DUI Laws
Every permit test covers DUI/DWI laws — and for teen drivers, the rules are stricter than for adults. Most states have a zero-tolerance policy for drivers under 21: any detectable blood alcohol content (BAC) — even 0.01% or 0.02% — can result in license suspension. For adults, the legal limit is 0.08% BAC, though impairment can begin at lower levels.
Expect questions about the penalties for DUI (license suspension, fines, possible jail time), implied consent laws (you agree to chemical testing when you drive), and the effects of alcohol and drugs on reaction time and judgment. Alaska's knowledge test dedicates a full section to drug and alcohol questions — our DMV Drug and Alcohol practice test covers this material in depth.
Other Topics Covered on the Permit Test
Study Strategies That Actually Work for First-Time Drivers
Here's the honest truth: the driver's handbook your state publishes is the single most important study resource you have. Everything on your permit test comes directly from it. But most teens read it once — or skim it — and then wonder why they're guessing on a quarter of the questions.
Don't try to memorize the handbook in one sitting. Break it into sections — signs, traffic laws, speed limits, parking, DUI — and study one section per day. Use the practice tests in this guide to identify which sections you're weakest on, then go back and reread those parts specifically. Take notes as you go. Writing things down forces your brain to process information more deeply than passive reading.
Practice tests are the closest thing to the real exam you'll find before test day. They use the same format (multiple choice, 20–50 questions) and pull from the same topic pool. More importantly, they show you where you're weak. If you keep missing questions about passing laws or railroad crossings, that's exactly where to spend the next study session.
Don't just take one practice test and call it good. Take several — until you're consistently scoring above 90%. The actual test requires 70–86% depending on your state, so building a buffer matters. Our Alaska Permit Practice Test and Alabama DMV Practice Test are full-length examples of the format you'll see at the DMV. Even if you're in a different state, the core topics overlap heavily.
Signs carry disproportionate weight on most permit tests. Make flashcards or use a road sign quiz until you can identify every sign shape and color at a glance. A brief, focused review session the evening before your test is helpful — but don't cram all night. Sleep deprivation measurably impairs memory recall, and you need to be sharp at the terminal. When you take practice tests, do it timed — most states allow 25–45 minutes. Getting comfortable with the pace prevents you from stalling on any single question during the real thing.
After You Pass: Supervised Driving Requirements
Passing the knowledge test feels great — but the learner's permit is just the beginning. Most states require you to hold the permit for a minimum period (often 6 months, sometimes a full year) and log a set number of supervised driving hours before you can apply for a full license. This is part of the Graduated Driver Licensing (GDL) system, which all 50 states now have in some form.
The number of required supervised hours varies significantly. States like Alabama and Alaska typically require 30–40 hours. California, Florida, and Ohio require 50 total hours, with at least 10 at night. Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey push 60 or more supervised hours. Night driving hours are specifically required in most states because nighttime conditions are more demanding — lower visibility, fatigue, and statistically higher rates of impaired drivers on the road.
How you use the supervised driving period matters as much as logging the hours. Don't just drive familiar routes. Practice highway merging, parallel parking, left-turn-only lanes, railroad crossings, and driving in rain. Variety builds the situational awareness that makes new drivers actually safe — not just technically legal. Your supervising adult should be engaged, not scrolling their phone. This is practice time, not errand time.
While you hold your permit, you're subject to restrictions that carry real consequences if violated. Fines, permit suspension, or reset of your supervised hours clock in some states. Take the restrictions seriously — and keep track of your permit's expiration date. Most permits are valid for 1 to 2 years. Don't get your permit and let it sit unused.

Common Permit Restrictions You Must Follow
What to Bring to the DMV on Test Day
Failing to bring the right documents is one of the most avoidable reasons people leave the DMV without their permit. Check your state's specific DMV website for the exact document list — requirements can be surprisingly particular. Some states have strict rules about which documents they accept as proof of residency. Preparing your documents the night before is much less stressful than scrambling the morning of your appointment.
DMV Document Checklist
Common Reasons First-Time Test-Takers Fail
Knowing what trips people up is almost as valuable as knowing the right answers. Here are the most common reasons teens fail on the first try — and how to avoid each one. Most of these aren't about intelligence or ability. They're about preparation habits.
Relying on common sense instead of the handbook. Traffic law is specific. You might guess correctly on general knowledge, but the test asks about precise rules — exact following distances, specific right-of-way scenarios, defined speed limits by road type. Common sense alone won't cut it.
Underestimating the road sign section. Many test-takers spend most of their prep time on traffic laws and don't drill road signs as seriously. Signs can account for 30–40% of the test in some states. If you're not doing dedicated sign practice, you're leaving points on the table.
Not reading questions carefully. Some questions use phrasing like "which of the following is NOT correct" or "you must yield EXCEPT when." Read every word. Missing a negation changes the correct answer entirely.
Skipping the alcohol and DUI section. It's easy to gloss over this part, especially if you're 15 and far from drinking age. But these questions appear on every state's test, and the rules are specific. Know the BAC limits, implied consent, and the penalties.
Avoiding these pitfalls — combined with genuine study from the handbook and consistent practice test work — puts you in a strong position to pass on your first attempt. Most teens who fail did so because they underestimated the test, not because the material is hard. It's not, if you prepare for it.
Learner's Permit Practice Tests — Benefits and Limitations
- +Reveal specific knowledge gaps that reading the handbook alone won't expose
- +Build timing awareness for the real computer-based test
- +Reviewing wrong answers is the highest-ROI study activity
- +Free and widely available — no cost to practice repeatedly
- +Consistent 90%+ practice scores translate to real test confidence
- −Third-party question banks vary in quality and state alignment
- −Taking tests before any content study produces misleading baseline scores
- −Memorizing answers without understanding the rule doesn't transfer to the road
- −Official state practice tests are limited in most states
- −Practice scores can't account for test-day nerves or unfamiliar phrasing
DMV Learner's Permit Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames 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.