Kansas DMV Sign Test 4
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Kansas puts road signs inside the regular Class C knowledge test, not on some separate road-sign-only exam, which is worth knowing before you start studying the wrong thing with too much confidence. The real knowledge test has 25 questions, and you need 20 correct to pass. That gives you room to miss 5, and honestly, that room can disappear faster than people expect when the questions start leaning into sign shapes, colors, and symbols instead of plain common sense. This Kansas road signs practice test gives you a focused way to work on that part of the exam without dragging every licensing rule into the same study session. It uses 20 multiple-choice questions, with 16 correct matching the 80% passing standard, so the scoring feels familiar without pretending to be the full official test. The point is not to memorize every sign like you are collecting stamps. It is to recognize what a sign is telling you quickly: stop, yield, merge, slow down, watch for a school zone, prepare for a curve, pay attention to lane use, or understand that a symbol-only sign is not asking for your creative interpretation. And yes, the details matter. Kansas sign questions may ask about shape, color, and symbol identification, which sounds simple in a nice calm sentence like this one. Then you get several answer choices that all seem almost reasonable, and suddenly that calm sentence is less helpful. A red octagon, a yellow warning diamond, an orange work-zone sign, a railroad crossing marker, a school crossing sign—these are the things you want settled in your head before the DMV screen is involved. There are a few licensing facts that sit nearby, so keep them nearby. If you fail the written test, you can retake it the next working day, but Kansas limits you to 4 written-test attempts before a 6-month wait may apply. The online KnowTo Drive test has a 60-minute limit, and online registration is valid for 14 days. Teen drivers can start with an instruction permit at 14, with parent approval required for 14- and 15-year-olds, and supervised practice comes before restricted license privileges. Use this free Kansas DMV practice test as a sharp, practical warm-up for the road sign questions on the knowledge test. Read the handbook too, of course—nobody is pretending otherwise—but this is where you find out which signs you actually know and which ones were just sort of floating around in your memory looking familiar.