Failed BMV written test twice — what am I missing in my study approach?

by Hannah K. 3 views3 replies
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Hannah K.OP
May 27, 2026

So I failed the BMV written test for the second time last week and I'm honestly embarrassed. I've been reading the driver's manual front to back but something just isn't clicking. I scored a 68% both times and you need a 75% to pass in Indiana. The road signs section keeps tripping me up — I'll think I know what a sign means and then the question is worded in a way that throws me completely off.

A friend mentioned I should try a BMV practice test instead of just re-reading the manual over and over. That actually makes sense because I think I'm memorizing words without understanding how the rules apply in real situations. Has anyone found a good study guide that breaks down the reasoning behind the rules rather than just listing them? I've got maybe two weeks before I want to attempt this again.

Any exam tips from people who've been through this would be genuinely helpful. Especially around right-of-way scenarios and those tricky sign identification questions. Third time has to be the charm, right?

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Preethi N.
May 28, 2026
Oh man, I was in the exact same spot six months ago. What finally got me over the hump was doing practice tests under timed conditions — like actually setting a timer instead of casually clicking through. Once I started doing that, I realized I was second-guessing myself way too much on questions I actually knew. I passed with an 88% on my third attempt. The road signs section honestly just takes repetition more than anything else.
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Brian Y.
May 28, 2026
Two weeks is plenty of time, don't stress. Do at least one full practice test every day and review every wrong answer. I studied for about 8 days total and passed with a 92%. The real test felt a lot easier once I'd seen enough practice questions.
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Jessica L.
May 28, 2026
The manual is honestly terrible for actually learning this stuff. I'd recommend finding a site that gives you immediate explanations after each wrong answer — that feedback loop is what makes practice tests so much more effective than passive reading. Also, don't skip the alcohol/impairment questions. That section tripped up almost everyone I know who failed. Probably 4-5 questions just on that topic alone in my exam.

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