Kansas Road Signs Test
80% Passing score
10 Questions
2 Mistakes allowed
A Kansas DMV road sign practice test is worth taking seriously because sign questions are not decorative filler on the exam. They are part of the Kansas Class C knowledge test, which is the written test used for a standard noncommercial driver license or instruction permit. The full test has 25 questions drawn from the Kansas Driving Handbook, including traffic laws, safe driving habits, driver responsibility, impaired and distracted driving, sharing the road, rural driving, and, yes, road signs—the part many people think they already know because they have seen a stop sign before. This Kansas DMV road sign test gives you a focused way to work through that material without getting buried in the entire handbook at once. The practice test includes 20 multiple-choice questions on the signs Kansas drivers are expected to recognize by shape, color, symbol, and meaning. Warning signs, regulatory signs, guide signs, and the familiar-looking ones that still manage to cause second-guessing all belong here. And that matters, because on the real Kansas knowledge test, road sign questions are folded into the same exam as the traffic-law questions. There is not a separate road-sign-only test for a standard Class C permit or license, so these answers count toward your overall score. For this Kansas permit practice test, you will need 16 correct answers out of 20 to pass. On the official Kansas knowledge test, the practical passing target is 20 correct out of 25, or 80%, meaning you can miss up to 5 questions. Applicants may take the written test at a Kansas driver license office or online through KnowTo Drive. One more detail that is worth knowing before you get too casual about retesting: Kansas allows 4 chances to pass the written test. After that fourth failed attempt, the wait becomes much longer. Use this Kansas driving test practice as a concentrated sign review before you move into the broader exam material. Read the Kansas Driving Handbook, absolutely, but do not just skim the sign pages and call it handled. Shapes and colors do a lot of work on the test, and the faster you can connect them to meaning, the less room there is for hesitation. That is the quiet advantage of practicing signs separately: by the time they show up inside the full Kansas DMV test, they feel familiar instead of weirdly negotiable.