Massachusetts Permit Test Practice 4
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Massachusetts gives new drivers a fairly clear licensing path, but clear does not mean casual. The permit test is the first real checkpoint, and this MA practice permit test is built to help you treat it that way — calmly, carefully, and with enough repetition that the rules start to feel familiar instead of memorized five minutes before the exam. This fourth Massachusetts practice permit test includes 20 multiple-choice questions covering road safety, child passenger safety, and the kind of practical driving knowledge the RMV expects you to understand before you get behind the wheel with a permit. The child safety seat material deserves a little extra attention, too. It is one of those topics people sometimes rush through because it feels separate from “regular” driving, except it is not separate at all. Passenger safety is part of driving, especially when the passenger cannot buckle, adjust, or protect themselves without you doing it correctly. For teen drivers, the permit is also the doorway into the Junior Operator License program. You can apply for a Massachusetts Class D learner’s permit at 16, but moving forward takes more than simply passing one test and waiting around. Drivers under 18 must hold the permit for at least 6 consecutive months, keep a clean record, complete RMV-approved driver education, finish the required supervised driving practice, and pass the Class D road test before earning a Junior Operator License at 16½. During the permit stage, you must drive with a qualified licensed adult beside you, and late-night driving restrictions apply. So, yes, the written exam is only one step — but it is the step that gets the whole process moving. This Mass RMV learners permit practice test lets you work through the material without a timer breathing down your neck. You can slow down, reread the wording, and sort out why one answer is better than the others. That is the part that matters. Clicking through questions quickly might feel productive, in a noisy sort of way, but the real value comes from understanding the explanation afterward, especially when you miss something you thought you knew. At the end, you will see a summary of your answers, including the correct responses and explanations. A score of 16 out of 20 is the target here, and it is a useful benchmark before you move on to the official Massachusetts permit test. Adult first-time drivers have a simpler licensing path than teens — no required driver education after 18 — but they still need to pass the learner’s permit exam before practicing for the road test. Either way, this Massachusetts driving permit practice test gives you a more grounded, less frantic way to prepare.