Mississippi Drivers Ed Practice Test 8
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This eighth Mississippi permit practice test gets into intersections, which sounds tidy and harmless until you remember that intersections are where everyone suddenly becomes a mind reader, a rule lawyer, or both. The 20 multiple-choice questions focus on four-way stops, right-of-way choices, turns, signs, signals, and the little bits of driving etiquette that the handbook explains in a calm voice, while real traffic tends to present them with a pickup truck, a blinking signal, and somebody inching forward like they are negotiating a treaty. That is exactly why this Mississippi drivers ed practice test is worth taking seriously. The real Mississippi learner permit knowledge test is the computerized exam given through the Mississippi Department of Public Safety, Driver Service Bureau, and it is based on the Mississippi Driver’s License Manual. It covers traffic laws, safe driving rules, driver license requirements, road signs, and signals. The practical format is 30 multiple-choice questions, with 24 correct answers needed to pass. So, 80%. Six misses. After that, the math stops being friendly. Intersections are a smart place to drill because they do not stay in one neat little category. A single question can involve a stop sign, a turn, another driver’s right-of-way, and your ability to resist the very human urge to just guess and hope. This MS drivers ed test gives you a way to catch those shaky spots before the official Mississippi permit test does, which is preferable, obviously, because the official test is in person and the testing area is not the place to discover that you only “sort of” understood four-way stops. Mississippi may issue a regular learner’s permit at age 15 after the knowledge exam and eye exam, and that permit is valid for 2 years. While driving on it, you need a licensed driver age 21 or older in the seat beside you. At 16, you generally need to hold the permit for 12 months, or until your 17th birthday, before moving to a regular Class R license. Mississippi currently does not require a road skills test for a regular license, which makes the written rules feel a little less optional than people sometimes pretend. Take this Mississippi drivers ed permit test more than once. Pair it with the official manual, road sign review, and broader practice, then come back to the intersection questions until the right-of-way rules stop feeling like trivia and start feeling like something you can actually use.