Nevada Driving Test Practice 9
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Nevada school bus rules are one of those permit-test topics people tend to skim, mostly because the idea feels obvious: kids, buses, stop when required. Fine. But the actual DMV written test is not checking whether you generally support safe driving around school buses. It is checking whether you know the Nevada rule well enough to handle the details, including when traffic in different directions must stop, what loading and unloading really means in practice, and how quickly a normal driving situation can turn into a serious legal and safety issue. This Nevada DMV permit practice test gives you 20 school-bus-focused questions drawn from the kind of material covered in the Nevada Driver’s Handbook. To pass, you need at least 16 correct answers, which matches the 80% passing standard used on the official Nevada knowledge test. The real Class C, non-commercial permit knowledge test has 25 multiple-choice questions, with 20 correct answers required. So this practice written driving test is not pretending to be the whole exam. It is more like a concentrated drill on one area that deserves more attention than it usually gets. The official Nevada DMV permit test is based on the state handbook, and that handbook covers a lot: traffic laws, highway signs, pavement markings, defensive driving, DUI rules, licensing requirements, safe driving habits, and the general rules of the road. This Nevada drivers ed practice test stays in its lane, so to speak, by focusing on school bus safety. That narrow focus is useful, because school bus questions are often about judgment, timing, and recognizing what the law expects before you roll past something you absolutely should not roll past. Nevada applicants can take the knowledge test at a DMV office or online through KnowTo Drive Nevada. The online test is available 24/7 in English and Spanish, requires a desktop or laptop with a front-facing camera, has a 60-minute limit, and sends results to the DMV automatically. In-person testing is done on DMV touch-screen computers, also in English and Spanish, with audio available and no time limit. And, just to keep the paperwork reality in the room, passing the test does not finish the licensing process. You still have the document check, vision screening, fees, and credential steps. Use this Nevada practice permit test to tighten up one of the rules that matters most around real children, real roads, and real consequences.