Texas DMV Test Evaluation

4.7 out of 5 (3155 votes)
80% Passing score
10 Questions
2 Mistakes allowed
Our Texas DMV practice test is a practical first read on whether your permit-test knowledge is where it needs to be. Not perfect, not polished, not “I skimmed the handbook once and feel decent about it” ready — actually ready. The official Texas Class C knowledge test is based on the Texas Driver Handbook, and the real exam uses 30 multiple-choice questions. You need 21 correct answers to pass, which works out to 70%. Road signs are included, but they are folded into the larger test with traffic laws, right-of-way, safe driving habits, alcohol and drug rules, distracted driving, vehicle equipment, and driver responsibility. This practice test starts with 10 carefully selected questions and asks for 8 correct answers to pass. That is a little tougher than the official percentage, on purpose. A practice test should do more than pat you on the back; it should catch the gaps while they are still easy to fix. And, well, some of those gaps are sneaky. A driver may know what a stop sign looks like and still miss a question about who goes first at an uncontrolled intersection, or how Texas treats wireless device use for younger provisional drivers, or what a sign is warning about when the wording is not doing anyone any favors. The questions cover the material Texas applicants actually need: road signs, lane use, right-of-way, freeway driving, rural-road judgment, safe following distance, and the everyday rules that DPS expects drivers to understand before they get behind the wheel. When you miss a question, the hints and explanations are there to make the mistake useful. Slightly humbling, maybe, but useful. This Texas driving test practice works for more than one kind of applicant, too. Teens using the Graduated Driver License program can use it while working toward a learner license. Adults 18 through 24 can use it alongside the required 6-hour adult driver education course. First-time applicants age 25 and older, who are not required to take driver education but still need to handle the testing process, can use it as a reality check before making a DPS appointment. Start with this short test, then keep going through the other Texas permit test practice exams until the rules feel familiar and you can consistently score well.

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