Nevada DMV Permit Practice Test 6
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This sixth Nevada DMV practice test is built for the part of studying where the handbook has started to blur together and you need to see whether the rules are actually sticking. It gives you 20 practice questions on Nevada driving laws, safe driving habits, turn signals, road awareness, and the ordinary little details that tend to matter more than people expect. Not because they are tricky for the sake of being tricky, but because driving rules are usually tested in the exact place where vague confidence starts getting expensive. The real Nevada Class C non-commercial knowledge test has 25 multiple-choice questions, and the passing score is 80%. In plain terms, you need 20 correct answers and can miss no more than 5. The test may stop once you reach 20 correct answers, or once you hit 6 wrong answers, which is a slightly brutal way of reminding you that the margin is not huge. This Nevada DMV practice permit test follows the same general feel, using multiple-choice and true/false-style questions so you can get used to reading the wording, sorting out distractors, and choosing the answer that is actually correct—not just the one that sounds familiar after a long study session. On this practice DMV test, you will need at least 16 correct answers out of 20 to pass, keeping the same 80% standard. Some questions include images, which helps with road signs, lane positions, maneuvers, and visual judgment calls where a written explanation can get a little clunky. There is also a clear focus on signaling correctly, because Nevada expects drivers to show their intentions before turning, changing lanes, merging, or pulling away from a curb. Basic, yes. Also one of those basics people mess up constantly. For teen drivers, the permit test is only the opening stretch. Nevada allows an instruction permit at 15½, but drivers under 18 must hold the permit for 6 months before taking the road test at 16. They also need 50 hours of supervised driving, including 10 at night, with a supervising driver who is at least 21 and has been licensed for at least 1 year. Driver education is required before a full under-18 license, though not before the instruction permit. And then, because licensing always has paperwork lurking nearby, bring the right documents: proof of identity, Social Security number, two proofs of Nevada residency, and name-change documents if needed. Minors also need a parent or guardian signature and DMV 301 Certification of Attendance. Use this Nevada DMV permit practice test as a serious rehearsal, and the real test starts to feel a lot less like a gamble.