Minnesota DMV Practice Test 7
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Getting ready for the Minnesota permit test means dealing with more than a few friendly little road-sign questions and the obvious stuff everyone swears they already know. The Class D knowledge test is the first official checkpoint for most new drivers in Minnesota, whether you are 15 and entering the Graduated Driver Licensing system or an adult finally getting around to the whole license thing. Either way, the test expects you to know the rules, not just have a vague feeling that stop signs are important and icy roads are bad. Bold position, Minnesota. This Minnesota permit test practice gives you 20 questions covering the material that tends to show up when it counts: road signs, right-of-way rules, safe driving habits, insurance requirements, winter driving, cell phone restrictions, and those small legal details that somehow become very important the second they appear in multiple-choice form. To pass this MN permit practice test, aim for at least 16 correct answers. That does not magically replace the Minnesota Driver’s Manual, sadly, but it does give you a decent read on whether the information is actually sticking or just floating around in your head looking official. For teen drivers, the permit comes with a few extra hoops, because of course it does. Minnesota allows teens to apply for an instruction permit at age 15, but only after meeting driver education requirements, passing the knowledge test, passing vision screening, providing documents, and getting the required adult approval. Under 18, driver education starts before the permit, with classroom instruction and behind-the-wheel enrollment folded into the process. After that, the path runs through the instruction permit, provisional license, and full Class D license. Permit holders need a licensed adult beside them while driving, and teen permit drivers cannot use a cell phone behind the wheel, even hands-free. Adults get a cleaner version of the process, though not exactly a free pass. First-time adult drivers still need to pass the Class D knowledge test, clear vision screening, get an instruction permit, practice under supervision, and pass the road test. At 18, the permit must be held for six months before licensing; at 19 or older, it is three months. Use this Minnesota DMV practice test as a study check, a confidence boost, and a quiet warning system for the rules you were maybe skimming too quickly.