Kansas Driving Test Practice 5

5 out of 5 (30 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Studying for the Kansas driver’s permit test works better when the material is organized instead of tossed at you in one big, slightly chaotic pile. This Kansas DMV practice test gives you 20 questions that stay close to the kinds of things Kansas expects new drivers to know: traffic laws, road signs, lane markings, safe stopping distance, bad-weather driving, and the ordinary judgment calls that do not feel ordinary yet when you are still new behind the wheel. The road-rule material comes first, because that is the backbone of the Kansas written test. You need to recognize signs, understand what pavement markings are telling you, know when to yield, and make sense of how speed, weather, and following distance all work together. Some questions include images, which is a relief, honestly, because a sign or lane marking is often easier to identify when you can actually see it instead of reading a stiff little description of it. Alcohol-related driving laws deserve their own attention, and this practice test treats them that way. In Kansas, the legal BAC limit is 0.08% for drivers 21 and older, while drivers under 21 are held to a much lower 0.02% limit. That small-looking difference matters. DUI penalties can include fines, license suspension, and even jail time, so the point is not just memorizing a number long enough to pass. The point is understanding the rule, the consequence, and the reason Kansas puts so much weight on impaired driving in the first place. After you finish, the test summary shows what you missed and gives the correct answers, which is where practice actually gets useful. Not complicated, just a more focused way to prepare for the Kansas permit practice test before you sit for the real exam. Practice tests are also useful for adults getting licensed for the first time. If you are 18 or older and have never held a license, Kansas requires proof of identity and residence, lawful driving eligibility, a vision exam, the required written exams, a driving exam in a vehicle you provide, and payment of the applicable fees. Adult applicants are not subject to the teen one-year permit requirement, driver education requirement, 50-hour affidavit, or teen passenger and nighttime restrictions. For applicants age 17 and older, an instruction permit has no required holding period, though permit driving still requires a licensed adult at least 21 years old in the front seat.   So if you are ready to start independent driving, let this practice session get you that much closer.
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