New Jersey Driving Test Practice 6

5.0 out of 5 (39 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This sixth NJ DMV practice test is built around 20 questions that give you a practical feel for the New Jersey driving permit test without turning the whole thing into a stiff little handbook lecture. You’ll see multiple-choice and true-or-false questions, the same general style used on the real test, and you’ll need 16 correct answers to pass. That matters because the permit test is not just checking whether you glanced at a rule once. It is checking whether you can recognize the rule when it is phrased differently, tucked into a situation, or tied to something ordinary like signaling before a turn, changing lanes, or merging when traffic is already doing what traffic does. Turn signals get special attention here, and they should. New Jersey driving leaves very little room for mystery communication, especially when you are moving through a crowded intersection, easing onto the Parkway, or trying to make a clean lane change without creating a small rolling argument behind you. This NJ drivers practice test helps you slow that thinking down a bit. Read the question, notice the exact wording, choose the answer, and then actually review the explanation afterward. The review is where a missed answer stops being a random mistake and becomes something you probably will not miss again. The practice written driving test also fits into the bigger licensing process, which is useful to understand early instead of learning it in pieces later. Since February 1, 2025, New Jersey MVC has required permit holders under 21 to complete at least 50 supervised driving hours before getting a probationary driver license, including 10 hours at night. You can use the Share the Keys log to track those hours, but MVC requires Form BA-CSD at licensure. That distinction is easy to overlook, and yes, it is the kind of paperwork detail that can matter at exactly the wrong moment. When you reach the road test stage, the details keep piling up. You’ll need the same 6 Points of ID used for the permit, a valid examination permit, an accompanying New Jersey licensed driver who is at least 21 and has held a New Jersey license for at least three years, plus GDL decals if you are under 21. The vehicle must be registered, insured, inspected, and arranged so the examiner can reach the emergency brake. Unsafe tires, poor brakes, missing seat belts, tinted windows, blocked brake access, or a truly messy interior can get the test denied before you ever parallel park.
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