Kansas DMV Sign Test 3
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Kansas road signs are the part of test prep people love to treat like a warm-up, which is bold, considering the state can ask you to identify signs by shape, color, or symbol—not just by the words printed on them. So yes, the octagon matters. The triangle matters. That yellow warning sign you half-remember from riding in the back seat as a kid also matters, unfortunately. This Kansas road signs practice test is built to keep that material from turning into a last-minute guessing game. It focuses on the sign questions you can expect to see as part of the Kansas Class C knowledge test, the written exam used for a standard noncommercial driver license or instruction permit. The real test covers both Kansas traffic laws and road signs, which means road signs are not floating off in their own separate little universe. Kansas does not use a separate road-sign-only test for a standard Class C license or permit; those questions are folded into the 25-question knowledge exam. For the official Kansas knowledge test, plan around 25 questions, with a practical passing target of 20 correct answers, or 80%. That gives you room to miss up to 5, which sounds generous until you burn two misses on signs you “basically knew.” This is where a Kansas DMV practice test earns its keep. It lets you slow down, notice the patterns, and get used to how signs are tested before you are dealing with the real thing at a driver license office or online through KnowTo Drive. The practice test includes 20 questions, and the study aids are there for the moments when your brain confidently offers the wrong answer with absolutely no shame. Hints can nudge you in the right direction, and answer explanations help clean up the mess afterward. Not dramatically. Just usefully. The material stays close to the Kansas Driving Handbook, officially the Kansas Driving Handbook: Non-Commercial Driver’s Manual, so you are reviewing the signs, rules, and safe-driving ideas Kansas actually expects you to know. And if you take the official test online, remember that KnowTo Drive has its own setup requirements, including a desktop or laptop, webcam, keyboard, mouse, supported browser, and a 60-minute time limit. In other words, practice the signs—and practice answering without turning every question into a small legal hearing.