Nevada Road Signs Test 2
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
A red octagon does not need much explaining, but Nevada’s road sign questions are not built only around the signs everyone can name half-asleep. They are part of the main Class C knowledge test, mixed in with traffic laws, pavement markings, safe driving practices, DUI rules, licensing requirements, defensive driving, and the rest of the Nevada Driver’s Handbook. So the sign questions are not decorative. They count, and they count the same way every other question counts. This Nevada DMV road signs practice test gives you a focused way to work through that material before taking the real Nevada permit test. The test includes 20 multiple-choice questions on highway signs, warning signs, regulatory signs, traffic signals, lane markings, pavement markings, and the safe driving choices connected to them. Some of it will feel familiar, sure. Stop signs, yield signs, school zone signs — nobody is pretending those are exotic. But the DMV does expect you to know what the sign means in context, what action it requires, and what the safest response should be when the road is doing its usual road thing and not politely waiting for you to remember the handbook. The official Nevada Class C knowledge test has 25 multiple-choice questions. You need an 80% score to pass, which means 20 correct answers, with up to 5 missed questions allowed. The test may stop once you reach 20 correct answers or once you miss 6. Road sign questions are included in that same total. There is no separate road-sign-only test for the standard Class C permit exam, and there is no special missed-question limit just for signs. This Nevada practice permit test is untimed, which gives you room to do the thing most people skip: actually look at the sign, read the question, and think for a second. To pass this 20-question DMV sign test, you should answer at least 16 questions correctly, matching the 80% standard used on the real knowledge test. You can retake the Nevada DMV sign test as many times as you need. Repetition helps here, not because the material is impossibly difficult, but because quick recognition matters. The more often you review signs, signals, markings, and right responses, the more natural they feel when they show up on the DMV permit test — and, more importantly, on an actual Nevada road.