Kansas DMV Practice Test 2

5 out of 5 (30 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Kansas permit prep works better when it feels connected to the license process itself, not just a pile of practice questions floating around by themselves. This second Kansas permit practice test gives you 20 multiple-choice and true/false questions built around the material that actually matters for the Kansas DMV written test: traffic laws, road signs, seat belt rules, safe driving habits, permit restrictions, and the kind of licensing details people often think they understand until they have to explain them cleanly. One thing worth knowing early: Kansas allows a Class C instruction permit at age 14. That is young, compared with a lot of states, but it comes with guardrails. Applicants under 16 need written approval from a parent or guardian, and permit applicants generally need to pass the vision and written exams unless they have the proper driver education authorization, such as the DE-99 form. Also, and this is where Kansas gets a little particular, online driver education does not automatically satisfy the state’s driver education requirement. Approved programs are tied to Kansas-approved instruction, often through local accredited school districts. The teen licensing path is where the details start stacking up. Kansas uses a graduated driver licensing system for drivers ages 14 through 17, moving from an instruction permit to restricted driving privileges and eventually to a non-restricted license at 17. A 15-year-old applying for a restricted license must have held a state-issued learner permit for at least 1 year, completed approved driver education, and logged 25 hours of supervised driving. At 16, the requirements shift: the 50-hour affidavit matters, including 10 hours at night, and the driver may qualify for less restricted privileges if the record is satisfactory. The restrictions are worth practicing too, because they are exactly the sort of thing that can show up in plain language on a Kansas DMV test online. Instruction permit drivers need a licensed adult at least 21 in the front seat. Teen drivers also face wireless-device limits, passenger rules, and time-of-day limits depending on the license stage. Adults have a more direct route, thankfully, but still need proof of identity and residence, lawful eligibility, vision testing, applicable written exams, a driving test, and fees, but without the teen holding periods or supervised-hour affidavits. Use this Kansas DMV practice test as a focused check on what you know, what you half-know, and what needs another pass through the Kansas driver’s handbook.
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