Oklahoma Permit Practice Test
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Oklahoma gives you a fairly compact written test, but compact does not mean casual. The official Class D knowledge test has 20 multiple-choice questions, and you need 15 correct answers to pass. That is only five misses, which sounds forgiving for about two seconds, until you remember the test can pull from traffic laws, road signs, right-of-way rules, safe driving habits, pavement markings, signals, lane use, and those small state-specific details people swear they “basically know.” Sometimes they do. Sometimes they very much do not. This Oklahoma DMV practice permit test is built around that real format, so you are practicing with the same 20-question rhythm you will see on the actual written exam. The questions are not copied from the restricted state test — nobody legitimate is offering that — but they are written to reflect the kind of material Service Oklahoma expects new drivers to understand. Think road signs, work zones, school zones, emergency vehicles, license rules, and the everyday driving decisions that get less obvious once they are turned into multiple-choice wording. There are a few Oklahoma details worth treating seriously, even if they seem like footnotes at first. The online written test has a 60-minute limit and can be taken twice online before you have to test in person. A failed written test can also add a $4 fee to your account, due when your permit or license is issued. Not a disaster, obviously, but still something you would rather not collect like a souvenir. Teen drivers have more moving parts behind the test, too. Oklahoma’s graduated licensing system includes the learner permit, the 180-day holding period, 50 hours of supervised driving, 10 of those at night, and the Work Zone Safe Course before moving to an intermediate license. Adults have a different path, but they still need the written test unless it is waived through qualifying driver education. Use this Oklahoma permit test practice as a real check on what you know, not as a quick skim before test day. Read the Oklahoma Driver Manual, pay attention to the signs, and then work through the practice questions until the rules feel boring in the best possible way — familiar, steady, and not capable of surprising you at the counter.