Got my Rhode Island permit last Tuesday and wanted to write this up while it's still fresh. Passed with 90% - you need 80% to pass, which is 32 out of 40 questions. I'm 17, this was my first time taking any kind of driving test, and I'd heard from friends that a lot of people fail it the first time. They weren't wrong - I watched three other people come out looking pretty defeated while I was waiting.
I studied for about 10 days, maybe 45 minutes to an hour each day. Started with the official Rhode Island Driver's Manual - read the whole thing twice, which took about 4 hours total. Then I switched to doing practice questions online. I found a Rhode Island DMV practice test that was really close to the actual exam format, which helped me get comfortable with how the questions are worded. The wording matters more than you'd think.
The actual exam is on a computer at the DMV. Questions are randomized from a pool, so everyone gets a slightly different test. The topics that came up most for me: right-of-way rules at intersections, speed limits in school zones and residential areas, what to do at yellow vs flashing red lights, and a few questions about blood alcohol limits and DUI consequences.
The whole DMV visit took about 2 hours including the written test, vision screening, and getting my photo taken. Bring your birth certificate, Social Security card, and proof of Rhode Island residency. They're strict about the documents - the person ahead of me got turned away because she didn't have the right paperwork.
Don't underestimate the section on DUI laws. I had 4 or 5 questions specifically about RI's BAC limits and implied consent law. The manual covers it but it's a small section so easy to skim past.
Bring way more documents than you think you need. I brought everything and still had a moment of panic when they asked for a second proof of residency. A utility bill or school transcript works if you're under 18.
The right-of-way questions hit heavy on my test too - probably 8 or 9 of them. I failed my first attempt at 75% and those were where I lost the most points. Going back to drill intersection scenarios before my retest next week.
Ugh, I actually failed mine the first time and it was embarrassing. I thought I could just skim the handbook the night before and wing it, but the Rhode Island test has a lot of specific stuff about speed limits in school zones and when exactly you have to use headlights that I completely blanked on. Second time I drilled practice questions for like a week straight and it made a huge difference because you start recognizing the way they word things.
The thing that really helped me wasn't reading more, it was testing myself over and over until the wrong answers felt obviously wrong. A lot of the questions I missed the first time weren't about stuff I didn't know, I just second-guessed myself. Once you've seen the same scenario ten times in practice you stop overthinking it. Don't make my mistake and assume you've got it after one readthrough of the handbook.