Minnesota Practice Permit Test 6
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Your MN permit test prep should cover more than a few memorized road signs and lucky guesses. This sixth Minnesota permit test practice gives you 20 realistic questions modeled around the kind of material you can expect on the actual DMV knowledge test, and you’ll need at least 16 correct answers to pass. It leans especially into turn signals, which may sound like basic driver-ed territory, because it is—but Minnesota expects you to understand exactly when and how to communicate your moves before you make them. That matters on real roads. A missed signal during a lane change on I-94, a lazy merge, a last-second turn near a crowded intersection in Minneapolis or St. Paul—small habits get noticed quickly when traffic is tight, pavement is slick, or roadwork has pinched three lanes into what feels like one and a half. So this MN DMV practice test does not treat signaling like a throwaway topic. It gives it the attention it deserves, along with the broader rules and judgment calls that show up on the permit test. The test is fully updated for 2026, which is important because old DMV test cheat sheets tend to float around long after they should have been retired. Some are harmlessly vague. Some are confidently wrong. Either way, that is not how you want to study for a state exam. With this Minnesota driver permit practice test, you can work through the questions, review what you missed, and tighten up the details before the real thing. There is also the licensing paperwork, which people sometimes remember too late. For a standard Minnesota license, instruction permit, or ID card, you generally need two primary documents, or one primary and one secondary document. Documents not in English need a translation and translation attestation. Under Minnesota’s Driver’s License for All law, residents may apply for a standard credential without proving legal presence in the United States, though applicants eligible for a Social Security number should know or provide it. REAL ID and enhanced licenses are different animals, paperwork-wise. A Minnesota REAL ID requires identity, Social Security, and residency documents, and originals are expected. An enhanced driver’s license requires U.S. citizenship, Minnesota residency, and a minimum age of 16. Teen drivers need parent or guardian approval and driver education proof, such as a Blue Card or Pink Card for the permit stage; later, the road test and provisional license bring in the supervised driving log and completed education requirements. The test is the first gate, basically, but it is not the only one.