Minnesota Road Signs Test Simulator
80% Passing score
25 Questions
5 Mistakes allowed
Minnesota road sign questions sit inside the regular Class D knowledge test, not off in a separate road-sign-only exam. That matters, because a lot of people study as if signs are their own little appointment with destiny, when really they are mixed in with traffic laws, right-of-way rules, pavement markings, safe-driving habits, winter driving, DWI rules, and the rest of the material from the Minnesota Driver’s Manual. The full MN permit test has 40 questions, and you need 32 correct answers to pass. So, yes, road signs count. They just count as part of the whole score. This Minnesota road signs practice test gives you a focused way to work on that one area without dragging yourself through every licensing topic at the same time. Each session includes 20 multiple-choice questions, and you will need 16 correct answers to pass, which keeps the same 80% standard used on the real knowledge exam. The questions come from a larger, updated database, so a new attempt is not just the same quiz wearing a different hat. You will see signs by shape, color, symbol, wording, and meaning, with visual prompts included where they actually help instead of just decorating the page. It is a useful tool for first-time teen drivers getting ready for an instruction permit, adults applying for a Minnesota license for the first time, new residents who want to get comfortable with state-specific expectations, and licensed drivers who are brushing up before renewal or retesting. Minnesota applicants must pass the Class D knowledge test and a vision screening before receiving an instruction permit. After that, the path depends on the driver. Teens deal with driver education, supervised driving hours, permit holding periods, and graduated licensing rules. Adults still need the permit, the practice, and the road test, just without the teen driver education requirements. Different lane, same licensing system—more or less. And that is the point of this MN DMV practice test. It does not pretend the real exam is only about signs. It narrows the focus on purpose, because sign recognition is one of those skills that seems settled until you have to separate a warning sign from a regulatory sign, read a lane marking correctly, or remember what a shape is telling you before the words even register. On Minnesota roads—snow, construction, rural highways, Twin Cities traffic and all—that kind of recognition is not trivia. It is part of driving well. Use this practice test to tighten that piece first, then carry the confidence into your full Minnesota permit test practice.