Minnesota Road Signs Test
80% Passing score
10 Questions
2 Mistakes allowed
Minnesota road signs do not get their own separate learner’s permit exam, which is worth knowing before you start studying. They are folded into the regular Minnesota Class D knowledge test—the same written permit test used for a standard passenger-vehicle instruction permit. So when you practice road signs, you are not preparing for some side quiz that lives off in its own little DMV corner. You are studying material that can show up on the real 40-question MN permit test, where you need 32 correct answers to pass and can miss up to 8 total. This MN DMV road signs practice test is built to help you get comfortable with the signs, signals, pavement markings, and traffic-control details covered in the official Minnesota Driver’s Manual. The real knowledge test pulls from that manual, including the “Signs, Signals, and Pavement Markings” section, so the point here is not to memorize random sign trivia. It is to recognize what a sign is telling you quickly, whether it is a warning shape, a regulatory color, a lane marking, or one of those construction-zone signs that suddenly feels very relevant when half the road is missing in July. You will work through 20 multiple-choice questions focused on Minnesota road sign knowledge. The questions are designed around the kinds of signs and markings drivers actually need to understand across the state, from Twin Cities traffic to rural highways, snow-covered streets, school zones, work zones, and all the ordinary places where a missed sign can turn into a bad habit fast. A couple of study aids are built in, too. When a question slows you down, a hint can nudge you in the right direction without simply handing you the answer. If you choose incorrectly, you will see an explanation so the mistake actually teaches you something instead of just sitting there looking rude. You can retake the MN road sign test as often as needed, which is useful because road signs get easier with repetition—the shapes, colors, symbols, and meanings start to stick. Use this Minnesota DMV practice test before taking the real Class D knowledge test, especially if road signs are the part you keep second-guessing. They count toward the same overall permit test score, and there is no special road-sign-only missed-question limit, so every sign question is just one more chance to protect your passing score.