Kansas Driving Test Practice 4
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This Kansas DMV practice test is built around child safety seats, which is one of those topics every driver is expected to know, not just parents or people hauling around a backseat full of booster seats and dropped snacks. The test gives you 20 multiple-choice questions on Kansas child passenger safety rules, proper seat use, and the judgment calls that come with driving young passengers around. You need 16 correct answers to pass, so yes, it is manageable, but it is still a real check on whether you understand the material. The format is deliberately low-pressure. There is no time limit, which means you can read the question, sit with the wording for a second, and avoid that familiar mistake of answering what you thought it asked instead of what it actually asked. That makes this Kansas driving test practice useful for first-time drivers, license renewal applicants, senior drivers brushing up, and anyone using a Kansas driver permit practice test to tighten up the details before the real exam. Kansas licensing has a few age rules worth keeping straight while you study. The state allows a Class C instruction permit at age 14. Applicants younger than 16 need written approval from a parent or guardian, and they must pass the vision and written exams unless they bring a DE-99 form from an approved driver education course they are currently attending. Driver education is not required for the instruction permit itself, which people do confuse. It is required, however, for a 15-year-old restricted driver license. Also, Kansas does not accept online driver education courses for that requirement; approved courses come through local accredited school districts and are approved by the Kansas Department of Education. For a restricted license at 15, the applicant must have held a state-issued learner permit for at least one year, completed 25 hours of supervised driving, and finished an approved driver education course. At 16, the requirement shifts to 50 hours of supervised driving, including 10 hours at night, plus the vision, written, and driving exams unless a DE-99 completion slip covers the testing requirement. Updated for 2026, this Kansas drivers permit practice test keeps the focus where it belongs: learning the rule, understanding the reason behind it, and being ready to apply it when a child is actually riding in your vehicle.