New Jersey DMV Sign Test 4
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
New Jersey road signs deserve their own study time, partly because they show up everywhere and partly because the MVC knowledge test expects you to know what they mean without overthinking it. This NJ road signs test gives you a focused way to practice that specific slice of the exam: sign colors, shapes, symbols, signals, warnings, regulatory signs, guide signs, school-zone signs, work-zone signs, and the little visual clues that drivers are supposed to process quickly. Not eventually. Quickly. The practice test includes 20 multiple-choice questions, with a passing score of 16 correct answers. That makes it shorter than the full New Jersey permit knowledge test, but still serious enough to show whether your sign knowledge is solid or just sort of floating around in your head in a half-remembered way. After you finish, you can review the questions you missed along with the correct answers, which is where the actual studying usually happens — not during the confident first pass, but in the mildly humbling second look. A useful thing to know, because this gets misunderstood: New Jersey does not publish a separate road-sign-only passing score for the standard auto knowledge test. Road sign questions are folded into the regular MVC written driver test for first-time drivers. The real exam has 50 questions, and you need 40 correct answers to pass, which works out to 80%. So, yes, signs matter, but they count alongside everything else: New Jersey traffic laws, safe driving rules, GDL restrictions, DUI and alcohol laws, driver responsibility, vehicle operation, and road-test safety topics. The main source for the real test is the New Jersey Driver Manual, which the MVC makes available in English, Spanish, Chinese, Tagalog, Gujarati, and Korean. This NJ DMV practice test is meant to work with that manual, not pretend the manual does not exist. Use the manual for the official rules, then use this NJ permit sign test to see whether the road signs and signals are actually sticking in your memory. You can retake the New Jersey road signs practice test as many times as you need, which is useful because signs are often learned best through repetition. A red octagon should not require a committee meeting in your brain. Same with yellow warning signs, green guide signs, railroad crossings, lane-use signs, and the rest of the visual language New Jersey drivers are expected to recognize before the situation gets busy.