Minnesota Road Signs Test 2

5 out of 5 (30 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
If you are studying for the Minnesota Class D knowledge test, road signs need more than a quick glance through the manual. They are part of the same exam as traffic laws, signals, pavement markings, right-of-way rules, and general safe-driving material, so they are not handled as a separate road-sign-only test for a standard instruction permit. That matters because sign questions still count toward your final score, and they can be the kind of questions people miss simply because they looked familiar and got answered too quickly. This Minnesota road sign practice test gives you 20 multiple-choice questions focused on sign recognition, traffic-control situations, pavement markings, and the sign-related details covered in the Minnesota driver’s manual. It is a focused review, not a replacement for studying the full manual, but it gives you useful practice with the visual material that tends to show up on the official MN DMV knowledge test. Warning signs, regulatory signs, guide signs, construction-zone signs, lane-use markings — all of it is fair game, and some of it is more precise than people expect. That precision matters in Minnesota. A sign on a dry suburban road in May is one thing; the same instruction during a snowy Duluth commute or near a rural deer crossing can feel a little less theoretical. Then there is summer roadwork, which arrives with cones, lane shifts, temporary signs, and enough visual clutter to make even an experienced driver slow down and re-check what is happening. So, yes, this is test preparation, but it is also practical driving preparation, which sounds a little earnest but happens to be true. On the official Minnesota Class D knowledge test, there are 40 questions, and you need 32 correct answers to pass. You can miss up to 8 questions total. Road sign questions are included in that same overall score; there is no separate road-sign score or special missed-question limit for signs. Still, every missed sign question counts, and those misses are usually the ones that feel avoidable once you see the correct answer. Minnesota applicants may take the Class D knowledge test at a state exam station, through online testing, or at an authorized third-party testing location. The online option can be taken from home, but it requires a proctor who is at least 21 and holds a valid Minnesota driver’s license. You generally get two online attempts, with only one attempt allowed per day; after two failed online attempts, the next try must be at an exam station, and the third-test fee may apply. Some third-party testing sites also offer electronic knowledge testing and may charge an administration fee. Use this MN DMV practice test as a focused road sign review before the real knowledge test. Take it once to find the weak spots, then go back through the questions you missed instead of just chasing a better score. The point is not only to recognize the sign. It is to understand what the sign is telling you to do, quickly and correctly, before the official test asks you — or the road does.
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