Oklahoma Driving Test Practice 9
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
On the Oklahoma drivers permit test, questions about school buses are not filler. They deal with moments where a driver has to know, without wobbling around mentally, when to stop, when traffic in the other direction must stop, and what to do when children are getting on or off a bus. This Oklahoma drivers practice test focuses on that exact slice of the rules, which is narrower than “all of driving,” sure, but it is also one of the areas where guessing is a rotten strategy. The official Oklahoma Class D written knowledge test is multiple choice and includes 20 questions. You need 15 correct answers to pass, so 5 misses is the limit. There is a 60-minute time limit, and the online version allows 2 attempts before you have to wait until tomorrow to try again. This Oklahoma DMV practice test keeps the same 20-question format, giving you a realistic way to work through school bus laws without burying them under every other permit topic at once. The questions here cover school buses loading or unloading children, safe stopping rules, and the kind of situations that show up on Oklahoma roads all the time — rural routes, neighborhood streets, two-lane roads, and those slightly awkward places where everyone seems to hesitate for half a second. After the test, you can review what you missed, read the explanations, and use the hints to sort out the rule instead of just memorizing the answer. There is a difference, and it matters. For younger drivers, this practice also fits into the bigger licensing picture. Oklahoma allows a learner permit at 15 with approved driver education, or at 16 without it. Before moving on, teen drivers must hold the permit for 180 days and complete 50 hours of supervised driving, including 10 at night, with a supervising driver who is at least 21 and has been licensed for at least 2 years. So this drivers permit practice test is not just a warm-up for the written exam. It is a small but important part of learning how to make the correct call when a stopped school bus, a line of traffic, and a few unpredictable kids all meet in the same place.