I moved to Anchorage from Montana about 6 weeks ago and need to convert my license. Figured the written test would be easy since I've had my license for 9 years, but I looked at the Alaska driver manual and there's a lot of state-specific content I didn't expect - moose crossing protocols, winter driving regulations, and right-of-way rules that differ from what I'm used to back home.
The test requires 80% to pass and has 20 questions. I've heard that people who skip studying often miss the state-specific stuff and end up failing even with years of driving experience. I've been going through the manual but it's about 80 pages and not everything feels equally weighted.
I started using an AK DMV practice test yesterday and scored 75% on my first run through, so there's still some gaps to close. The road signs I'm doing fine on but the specific Alaska statutes around DUI limits and the implied consent sections are tripping me up.
Planning to give it one more week before I walk in. Anyone fail on the first attempt and have advice on what to really focus on?
The DUI and implied consent questions have very specific numbers attached - blood alcohol levels, refusal penalties, suspension durations. Those are worth memorizing explicitly, not just understanding conceptually.
Passed on my first try but I spent 3 evenings going through the manual section by section. The right-of-way at unmarked intersections question showed up on mine and I almost second-guessed myself on it.
Getting to 90%+ on practice tests before sitting is a safe target. The real exam pulls from the same pool of concepts the practice questions cover. One focused week is plenty if you actually read the explanations when you get something wrong.
I moved from Oregon two years ago and failed my first attempt - missed by one question. The winter driving section isn't intuitive if you're thinking about your previous state's rules. Alaska has specific guidance on studded tire use dates that I'd completely glossed over.