Nevada DMV Permit Practice Test 7
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Nevada gives adult first-time drivers a fairly straight road to a license, at least on paper. You pass the written knowledge test, clear the vision test, take the road skills test, prove who you are and where you live, pay the required fees, and eventually — after enough paperwork, waiting, and trying not to forget one tiny document — you get through it. Simple enough, except the written test still comes first, and that is where this seventh Nevada DMV practice permit test is useful in a very practical, no-drama kind of way. This free Nevada DMV practice test gives you 20 questions modeled around the kinds of things the official DMV knowledge test expects you to know: Nevada road rules, traffic signs, signals, safe driving habits, and legal basics like carrying proof of insurance. It is not trying to be clever for the sake of being clever, though a few questions may still make you pause and reread, because apparently that is part of the DMV learning experience. You will need 16 correct answers out of 20 to pass, which matches the 80% standard used for the real knowledge test. For adults 18 and older, an instruction permit is optional in Nevada. That sounds like a nice little shortcut, and sometimes it is, but there is a catch tucked in there. Adults who skip the instruction permit can still take the road test, but they have to schedule the drive test in person at a DMV office instead of booking it online. Adults also are not bound by the under-18 rules: no driver education requirement, no six-month permit holding period, no 50 supervised driving hours, no 10 nighttime hours, no teen passenger restriction, and no statewide teen curfew. So, yes, this practice DMV test is about passing the written exam, but it also helps you understand where that exam fits in the bigger licensing process. You can take it on a phone, tablet, laptop, or desktop, retake it as many times as needed, and use the misses as a study guide instead of a small personal tragedy. Get the knowledge test handled first, and the rest of the Nevada licensing process becomes much easier to deal with — still paperwork-heavy, obviously, but easier.