Kansas DMV Permit Test Simulator
80% Passing score
25 Questions
5 Mistakes allowed
Kansas puts the written knowledge test near the front of the licensing process, and it is worth treating it like an actual test, not a quick formality you squeeze in between errands. The Class C knowledge exam is based on the Kansas Driving Handbook: Non-Commercial Driver’s Manual, which means the questions can pull from traffic laws, road signs, safe driving habits, right-of-way rules, impaired and distracted driving, rural driving, sharing the road, and the licensing rules people tend to skim because, honestly, they look less exciting than the sign charts. This Kansas DMV practice test is built to match the part that matters most for permit prep: the 25-question knowledge test. A practical passing score is 20 correct answers, or 80%, so there is some room to miss a few (five, specifically) but not enough room to guess your way through the thing and hope Kansas is feeling generous. Each practice session gives you 25 randomly selected questions, which helps keep the experience closer to the real Kansas DMV written test instead of turning it into a memorized answer loop. You will run into Kansas traffic signs, sign shapes and colors, road rules, speed limits, emergency situations, and the kind of driver-safety details that seem obvious until the answer choices start sounding weirdly similar. Kansas also gives applicants more than one testing path. The official knowledge test may be taken at a driver license office or online through KnowTo Drive, the state’s official online exam option. That online version comes with its own setup requirements — a desktop or laptop, webcam, keyboard, mouse, internet connection, and an updated browser. Touch devices are not supported, which is the sort of small technical rule that can derail a perfectly decent plan if you find out too late. Use this Kansas online permit test practice as a controlled way to build confidence before an official attempt. It is useful for 14-year-olds working toward an instruction permit, older teens moving through Kansas graduated licensing, adults applying for the first time, and anyone who simply wants the written exam to feel less unfamiliar. Take it more than once, especially if road signs or right-of-way questions keep tripping you up.