Oklahoma Practice Permit Test 5
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Oklahoma’s written knowledge test is not just a memory check for road signs and lane markings. A fair amount of it comes down to whether you understand the rules that carry real consequences, and impaired driving is one of those areas where the details matter more than people sometimes want to admit. This fifth Oklahoma permit practice test puts that material in front of you in a focused way, with 20 questions that cover BAC limits, DUI regulations, alcohol’s effect on driving ability, and the kind of decision-making the state expects from anyone applying for a license. The format is intentionally close to the official Oklahoma DMV permit test, with multiple-choice questions and true-or-false items that make you slow down and sort through the wording. That part is useful, even if it sounds basic. A lot of missed questions are not missed because the rule is impossible; they are missed because two answers look almost believable, or because the test taker remembers the general idea but not the exact limit, restriction, or consequence. Practicing in that style gives you a cleaner sense of where you are solid and where you are still guessing a little too confidently. For adult applicants, the bigger licensing picture is worth keeping in mind too. If you are 18 or older and applying for a first Oklahoma Class D driver license, you do not have to go through the teen Graduated Driver License program. You still need to study the Oklahoma Driver Manual, bring the required identity, lawful-presence, residency, Social Security, name-change, or immigration documents if they apply, pass the vision test, pass the written test unless it is waived through a qualifying driver education completion certificate, pass the drive test, and pay the license issuance fee. A tidy process, yes, but not exactly something to wander into half-prepared. Adults may take the drive test through Service Oklahoma or an eligible Designated Examiner, and they are not required to get a learner permit first. That said, if you choose to practice with a learner permit, you must hold it for 30 days before applying for an unrestricted license. During that time, driving is limited to 5:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m., and a licensed driver who is at least 21 years old must be with you. So this Oklahoma permit practice test is doing more than helping you rehearse answers. It gives you a practical way to tighten up your knowledge, especially around impaired driving, before the official test turns those rules into questions you have to answer correctly.